Small spoon from Morozov
Small spoon from Morozov
Hi
I got this little spoon together with some other Russian spoons. The spoon is assayed 1895 in St. Petersburg. I think assayer is Aleksandr Shevyakov (according to the reference in the Russian section). The maker's mark is overstamped by a Morozov mark with imperial court supplier eagle. Reading the forum posts on Morozov I doubt if all marks on my spoon are proper and authentic. The spoon itself is in mint condition, no wear, even the monogram looks like it was made recently. The finish of the spoon is good, properly made.
Can you enlighten me what I have? An item from 1895? Russia? Sold by Morozov?
Thank you, Jörg
I got this little spoon together with some other Russian spoons. The spoon is assayed 1895 in St. Petersburg. I think assayer is Aleksandr Shevyakov (according to the reference in the Russian section). The maker's mark is overstamped by a Morozov mark with imperial court supplier eagle. Reading the forum posts on Morozov I doubt if all marks on my spoon are proper and authentic. The spoon itself is in mint condition, no wear, even the monogram looks like it was made recently. The finish of the spoon is good, properly made.
Can you enlighten me what I have? An item from 1895? Russia? Sold by Morozov?
Thank you, Jörg
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
Hi Goldstein
thank you, this is in line with the many posts on Morozov in this forum. I still wonder what happened with my little spoon. The Morzov mark is fake, so added later. However, it does not leave any marking signs on the other side, on the monogram. And the spoon is curved, which appears being made after marking. I must conclude the spoon was reworked when the Morozov mark was added, and the monogram is from then. However, the monogram is excellent work. Al lot of work for beefing up an older spoon. I wonder who does that, spending all the effort for a small plain spoon. Are you sure the spoon is not a recent production from Asia but authentic Russian, 1895? This would be fantasic.
Kind regards, Jörg
thank you, this is in line with the many posts on Morozov in this forum. I still wonder what happened with my little spoon. The Morzov mark is fake, so added later. However, it does not leave any marking signs on the other side, on the monogram. And the spoon is curved, which appears being made after marking. I must conclude the spoon was reworked when the Morozov mark was added, and the monogram is from then. However, the monogram is excellent work. Al lot of work for beefing up an older spoon. I wonder who does that, spending all the effort for a small plain spoon. Are you sure the spoon is not a recent production from Asia but authentic Russian, 1895? This would be fantasic.
Kind regards, Jörg
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
Hi AG2012 -
I dislike contradicting!
The shown punch
does not exist - only fakers use it .
The authentic punch looks like that:
It is the rarest punch from Morozov - I can not provide a photo.
I have shown different punches used by Morozov - they are all clear and crisp!
The from Jörg shown punch is later stamped on an original spoon - overstamping the original maker´s mark. Morozov never overstamped his suppliers marks - I can show hundreds of examples!
Regards
Goldstein
I dislike contradicting!
The shown punch
does not exist - only fakers use it .
The authentic punch looks like that:
It is the rarest punch from Morozov - I can not provide a photo.
I have shown different punches used by Morozov - they are all clear and crisp!
The from Jörg shown punch is later stamped on an original spoon - overstamping the original maker´s mark. Morozov never overstamped his suppliers marks - I can show hundreds of examples!
Regards
Goldstein
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
Hi Jörg -
faking Russian silver is a big business! This does not happen in back rooms - but in state-of-the-art factories. These types of stamps are produced today with laser technology - it only takes seconds.
Regards
Goldstein
faking Russian silver is a big business! This does not happen in back rooms - but in state-of-the-art factories. These types of stamps are produced today with laser technology - it only takes seconds.
Regards
Goldstein
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
I agree with Goldstein. Something is wrong with the spoon's marks. The mark is a smudge. Morozov usually had his court supplier mark on the left or on the right side of the name. More seldom above the name like in this case. When the court supplier mark was above the name, it had no frame like Goldstein already showed. At least I have never seen such a genuine mark with a frame. The over-stamping is also a red flag. Yes, the spoon is most likely authentic but who made is another story, not Morozov, sorry.
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
All
thank you! Fake marks or not fake is a continuous source for a debate in the Russian section. Let us end this on the topic of my little spoon. All agree it is authentic, it is a nice little spoon and I have no intention on reselling or comercialize in any other way. It will stay with me for the years to come.
Thank you all for your contribution on this topic! Jörg
thank you! Fake marks or not fake is a continuous source for a debate in the Russian section. Let us end this on the topic of my little spoon. All agree it is authentic, it is a nice little spoon and I have no intention on reselling or comercialize in any other way. It will stay with me for the years to come.
Thank you all for your contribution on this topic! Jörg
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
How curious.
It DOES look like a typical Russian 19th-early 20th century "good silver" design, a couple mismatched pieces of which can be found passed down through generations in every other upper middle class cupboard in the former Soviet Union...
(admin edit - see Posting Requirements )
What's the point of faking it in modern days anyway?
It DOES look like a typical Russian 19th-early 20th century "good silver" design, a couple mismatched pieces of which can be found passed down through generations in every other upper middle class cupboard in the former Soviet Union...
(admin edit - see Posting Requirements )
What's the point of faking it in modern days anyway?
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
Either way, a single spoon by Morozov is worth just a fraction above its bullion value.(admin edit - see Posting Requirements )
Regards
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
But with faked lucrative punches, one can try to make every available piece of silver marketable.
On the other hand, punches cannot be used too many times, they deteriorate.
On the other hand, punches cannot be used too many times, they deteriorate.
Re: Small spoon from Morozov
Maybe it's newish lower-grade silver sold as vintage antique Russian 84??
it does look suspiciously polished-but-dark though... lacks the heavy wear most 100-150yo articles have, but the color seems wrong for a mint condition unused article.
Compare with confimed real 1860's Russian 84-grade silver that's seen daily use and just had the tarnish cleaned off but not polished
it does look suspiciously polished-but-dark though... lacks the heavy wear most 100-150yo articles have, but the color seems wrong for a mint condition unused article.
Compare with confimed real 1860's Russian 84-grade silver that's seen daily use and just had the tarnish cleaned off but not polished