Vases
Famous & less famous brands
In our store, you find famous brands such as
Carstens, Scheurich, Dümler & Breiden, Deruta, Delft, Jasba, Bossano
as well as less famous brands, but also beautiful vases
Scheurich
Alois Scheurich and his cousin Fridolin Greulich started in 1928 a wholesale company in glass, porcelain and ceramics in Schneeberg. 1938 moved the business to Kleinheubach. In 1948 they started their own production of household ceramics sold under the name "Scheurich & Greulich."
During the 60s, 70s and 80s, Scheurich was the company that produced most ceramics of all companies. Much of the production was also exported. In the 90s production of art ceramics ceased but Scheurich continued to produce flower pots.
Scheurich
522-18
€ 36 --> € 18
Scheurich
414-16
€ 39 --> € 19,50
Scheurich
Fat Lava
401-28
€ 38 --> € 19
Scheurich
285-45
€ 49 --> € 24,50
Scheurich
Fat Lava
553-38
Sold
Scheurich
Fat Lava
517-45
Sold
Scheurich
Fat Lava
209-18
Sold
Scheurich
Fat Lava
517-30
Sold
Scheurich
203-22
€ 25 --> € 12,50
Scheurich
Swirl 18-25
Sold
Scheurich
550-10
Sold
Scheurich
405-13
Sold
Carstens
In 1892 brothers Christian and Ernst Carstens opened a ceramics factory in Brandenburg, E. Germany. By 1945, the company had collapsed from the onslaught of WW2. In 1947, the brothers re-established as Carstens-Tönnieshof and relocated to West Germany. After 30 years they further expanded production to factories in Austria, Australia and South America but by 1984 closed down completely.
Carstens
61-25
Sold
Carstens
61-20
Sold
Carstens
1219-30
Sold
Carstens
192-25
€ 45 --> € 22,50
Carstens
93-16
€ 45 --> € 22,50
Bavaria
Nymphenburg porcelain, German hard-paste, or true, porcelain produced in Bavaria from around the middle of the 18th century until the present day. The first factory was established in 1747 at the castle of Neudeck, outside Munich, by Maximilian III Joseph, elector of Bavaria.
Bavaria
Königliche Porzellan Manufaktur
€ 49 --> € 24,50
Bavaria
Bareuther Waldsassen
€ 39 -> € 19,50
Bavaria
Jaeger&Co
€ 25 --> € 12,50
Bavaria
Scherzer
Sold
Dümler & Breiden
311-20
€ 36 --> € 18
Dümler & Breiden
135-15
€ 18 --> € 9
Dümler & Breiden
Fat Lava
Sold
Dümler & Breiden
Founded in 1883 by Peter Dümler and Albert Breiden, it was located in Hohr Grenzhausen. During the late 19th and early 20th century they produced beer steins and punch bowls.
Jasba
1207-25
€ 28 --> € 14
Jasba
Founded in 1926 by Jakob Schwaderlapp in Ransbach-Baumbach (who went on to form Ceremano in 1959). The name is derived from his name and the town where it was located (Jakob, Ransbach-Baumbach).
Production of vases ceased in 1975 and the company concentrated on industrial items and tiles.
Jasba
1215-25,
Sold
Knoedgen
According to the Keramic-Marken Lexikon, the company was founded by J.L. Knoedgen in 1892 as the “first Ransbach stoneware and terracotta products factory” and by 1910 the firm had grown to employ some 45 workers. By 1995 the company had been sold.
Large Jug
€ 39 --> € 16,50
Medium Jug
€ 29 --> € 14,50
€ 29 --> € 14,50
€ 29 --> € 14,50
Sold
Perignem
In 1947, Rogier and Laurent Vandeweghe created the Perignem artistic ceramics workshops, "per ignem" or "by fire" in Latin, in Beernem. The Vandeweghe brothers were trained in the workshop of Alphonse Baert in Sint-Lucas in Ghent, with Joost Maréchal as teacher.
Deruta
Deruta has over 200 ceramic workshops, most of which retail their own goods along with other retail shops which display and sell pottery products. Classic patterns such as Raffaellesco, Gallo Verde and Arabesco are painstakingly hand painted by artists who have studied with a master; the techniques and patterns are carefully handed down from one generation to another.
Gallo Deruta
Sold
Grazia Deruta
Sold
Strehla
Strehla was established in Dresden in 1828.
In the 1960s and 1970s, the East German firm mainly produced vases & flower pots, exported in large quantities to many countries. The work of the East German manufacturer has a modest color. Often there is a metal glaze over the base glaze layer. On the bottom is a sort of hexagon with the brand name Strehla. The vase number usually consists of four digits imprinted on the bottom.
The company closed its doors in 1989.
Strehla 9012
€ 29 --> € 14,50
Strehla 9012
€ 22 --> € 11
€ 49 --> € 24,50
Royal Delft Polychrome Handwork
In addition to the world-famous Delft Blue, the master painters of Royal Delft also create the multi-coloured polychrome collection. This decoration style is inspired by the colours used in the Mediterranean region, giving the pottery its typical character.
Bassano
Bassano Ceramics is a centuries-old family-owned ceramic art form. The business started in northern Italy in the late 17th century and continues to this day. The Bassano family is one of Italy's oldest and most esteemed ceramic art families, producing fine, hand-painted pottery & tiles.
€ 24 --> € 12
Opaline
€ 25 --> € 12,50
Opaline
Opaline glass gets its distinctive iridescent milkiness from opacifying substances added during the mixing process, including sodium phosphate, sodium chloride, calcium phosphate, calcium chloride, tin oxide and talc. The glass can thus take on different colours and present variable shades, depending on the mixture and quantity of opacifying material substance.
Opaline
€ 29 --> € 14,50
Opaline
€ 25 --> € 12,50
Opaline
€ 20 --> € 10
Opaline
€ 20 --> € 10
Blue Delft
The production of Delft Blue started in the 17th century and it is still being made today. In the early days of Delft Blue, potters began by making the traditional Delftware using clay.
€ 39 --> € 19,50
€ 29 --> € 14,50
€ 12 --> € 6
€ 14 --> € 7
This clay was then baked before a tin glaze was added. Figures where then painted onto the glazed clay using crushed oxides, and then it was fired again. It was in the second baking stage that the paintings got their Delft Blue colour.
When potters in Antwerp fled from the Spanish Inquisition and settled in Delft, the manufacturing of Delft Blue pottery became more refined. The choice of clay changed and it was dipped in a white glaze. The Delft Blue style was used to make ornaments, plates, and also tiles.
€ 16 --> € 8
White Delft
€ 11 --> € 5,50 /piece
Zenith
Gouda
€ 39 --> € 19,50/piece
Italian Crystal
€ --> €
Crystal
was invented by George Ravenscroft, entrepreneur and glazier from London, who in 1674 patented a new formula to produce a glass with particular brilliance and transparency.
Cristal d'Arques
Sold
Belgian Crystal
Sold
Sold
Sold
Some 'speciallekes'
€ 49 --> € 24,50
€ 19-> € 9,50
€ 12 --> € 6
€39 --> € 19,50
Sold
Gloria Fine Porcelain
'Karlsbad'
Gold Leaf
€ 49 --> € 24,50
Ancient Japanese style
double gourd vase
€ 36--> € 18
€ 25 --> € 12,50
Marei ceramics
€ 18 --> € 9
Chinoisery Painted Cherry Blossem
Sold
Lygdemosis inspired
€ 29 --> € 14,50
Art Nouveau
€ 24 --> € 12
€ 24 --> € 12
Sold
Sold
Italian Pitcher
€ 39 --> € 19,50
red red red
€ 46 --> € 23
Sold
€ 22 --> € 11
€ 20 --> € 10
Mini
Wedgewood style
€ 8-> € 4
L.R. Italy
€ 18-> € 9
L.R. Italy
€ 29 --> € 14,50
Italian
€ 18--> € 9
Wedgewood style
€ 8--> € 4
Tzechoslovakia
€ 4 --> € 2 /piece
Asian mini's
€ 9-> € 4,50 /piece
€ 6-> € 3 /piece
Limoges
€ 10 -> € 5 / piece
Italian
€ 10 --> € 5 /piece
Capodimonte style
€ 22-> € 11 / piece
Italian
Sold
€ 12 -> € 6 / piece
Lord Nelson's Pottery
€ 19 -> € 8,50 / piece
Sold
Rosenthal 3256
Sold
€ 18 -> € 9 / piece
€ 12-> € 6 / piece
"Fat Lava"
The terms Fat Lava and West German Art Pottery are often used interchangeably, but technically have a different meaning. Fat Lava refers specifically to a type of thick glazes that gives the object a thick lava-like look. This type of glaze was commonly used in this period by German pottery manufacturers. The term Fat Lava itself though is of a much more recent date. It has been suggested that the term Fat Lava first emerged with an exhibition curated by Graham Cooley during the King's Lynn Arts Festival in 2006, but the term was actually being used by sellers in Germany at least a decade earlier and may actually be due to a slightly faulty computer translation that came up with "fat" when the more accurate term would be "thick". The precise origin is likely to remain uncertain, but it definitely predates the Fat Lava exhibition and related catalog.
Source : Wikipedia
Prices are VAT included
only collection possible
while supplies last...
Dear customers,
A lot of items have already been sold, for which we thank you. This has freed up some space in the store. So I dived into the basement again to bring up the remaining (last) stock. This is now being inventoried and will soon appear on the website and in the store.