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c1790 Battersea Box with Ship

Description

Description

c1790 Battersea Box with Ship. Late 18th to early 19th century. 2" x 1 5/8" lid<br>snaps shut and stays shut, minor damage to enamel on base, no damage to lid.<br><br>Battersea boxes developed in the mid 18th century as tiny decorative containers<br>covered with enamel or porcelain and decorated with pleasing designs. Originally<br>the boxes were made of copper covered with white enamel, decorated with<br>classical or scenes or portraits. They evolved over time to become more<br>sentimental.<br>The Battersea box got its name from a firm under the tutelage of Sir Stephen<br>Theodore Janssen, Once Lord Mayor of London at York House in Battersea. The<br>boxes were decorated by transfer printing, which took an impression from an<br>engraved plate painted with enamel and printed on to the box which was then hand<br>painted and fired. The firm existed only from 1753 to 1756 however other firms<br>producing similar boxes, especially those in the village of Bilston, took up<br>this technique. Battersea became the collective name for all such boxes.<br>With advancements in the pottery industry due to the Industrial Revolution,<br>Battersea boxes gradually fell from favour. Allowing small boxes to be produced<br>at less cost than the enameled competitors made Battersea boxes decline<br>significantly by the mid 19th century. They became popular again in the second<br>half of the 20th century with the development of commemorative boxes produced<br>for such well known firms as Tiffany & Co.
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c1790 Battersea Box with Ship. Late 18th to early 19th century. 2" x 1 5/8" lid<br>snaps shut and stays shut,... 閱讀更多

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$380.00 Excl. VAT

 
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      Description

      Description

      c1790 Battersea Box with Ship. Late 18th to early 19th century. 2" x 1 5/8" lid<br>snaps shut and stays shut, minor damage to enamel on base, no damage to lid.<br><br>Battersea boxes developed in the mid 18th century as tiny decorative containers<br>covered with enamel or porcelain and decorated with pleasing designs. Originally<br>the boxes were made of copper covered with white enamel, decorated with<br>classical or scenes or portraits. They evolved over time to become more<br>sentimental.<br>The Battersea box got its name from a firm under the tutelage of Sir Stephen<br>Theodore Janssen, Once Lord Mayor of London at York House in Battersea. The<br>boxes were decorated by transfer printing, which took an impression from an<br>engraved plate painted with enamel and printed on to the box which was then hand<br>painted and fired. The firm existed only from 1753 to 1756 however other firms<br>producing similar boxes, especially those in the village of Bilston, took up<br>this technique. Battersea became the collective name for all such boxes.<br>With advancements in the pottery industry due to the Industrial Revolution,<br>Battersea boxes gradually fell from favour. Allowing small boxes to be produced<br>at less cost than the enameled competitors made Battersea boxes decline<br>significantly by the mid 19th century. They became popular again in the second<br>half of the 20th century with the development of commemorative boxes produced<br>for such well known firms as Tiffany & Co.
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