Hi together,
please help me finding out the period of the marks. Could this "G" be London 1842??
And what makers mark is this CTWW??
Thanks a lot for your skilled help!!
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London mark - what period?
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Rusei
The makers are Thomas Whipham and Charles Wright (Grimwades 2976) this partnership was registered in 24th October 1757
This item is dated 1762
My own opinion is that this tankard was probaly altered in victorian times with the embossed decoration of the "hunting scene" which was quite common
Regards
Nigel
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The makers are Thomas Whipham and Charles Wright (Grimwades 2976) this partnership was registered in 24th October 1757
This item is dated 1762
My own opinion is that this tankard was probaly altered in victorian times with the embossed decoration of the "hunting scene" which was quite common
Regards
Nigel
.
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What exactly do you mean with altererd? Do you think only the bottom ist from 1762 and the top newer? How can we find out?nigel le sueur wrote:My own opinion is that this tankard was probaly altered in victorian times with the embossed decoration of the "hunting scene" which was quite common
Thanks very much!!!
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rusei
the georgian pieces - especially mugs etc - were very plain - they had lovely lines that appealed to the aesthetic of the day.
but the victorians loved exuberance and showiness because it announced to the world that they had made it and could afford - for example - the black walnut sideboard with a heap of dead animals carved all over it - and the plainness of the georgian silver annoyed them.
so there is a huge amount of georgian silver that has been "victorianized" if you will - later additions - quite skilled in most instances - added to "improve" the silver.
there is nothing wrong with your silver although a purist would say it has been ruined (there is a lively debate on this that extends even to monogramming flat- and hollow-ware being seen as "ruining" the silver)
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the georgian pieces - especially mugs etc - were very plain - they had lovely lines that appealed to the aesthetic of the day.
but the victorians loved exuberance and showiness because it announced to the world that they had made it and could afford - for example - the black walnut sideboard with a heap of dead animals carved all over it - and the plainness of the georgian silver annoyed them.
so there is a huge amount of georgian silver that has been "victorianized" if you will - later additions - quite skilled in most instances - added to "improve" the silver.
there is nothing wrong with your silver although a purist would say it has been ruined (there is a lively debate on this that extends even to monogramming flat- and hollow-ware being seen as "ruining" the silver)
.
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Rusei
Grimwades is prehaps the "bible" when it comes to identifying London smiths between 1697-1837.
l refered to the number the book has identified the mark on your tankard.
lt is an excellent reference book, (there are others, so l am not showing bias :-) )but out of print although there are copies around.
Regards
Nigel
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Grimwades is prehaps the "bible" when it comes to identifying London smiths between 1697-1837.
l refered to the number the book has identified the mark on your tankard.
lt is an excellent reference book, (there are others, so l am not showing bias :-) )but out of print although there are copies around.
Regards
Nigel
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