
Large, 18th-Century Style, Slipware Loaf Dish, Hand-made By The Iconic Coldstone Pottery, circa 1953-1969
Reworking of traditional slipware designs and wares from the past centuries are sometimes seen and the quality of such can be varied.
Coldstone pottery was outstanding in this area and although only some 70 years old, their wares have become "iconic" in their own right and highly collectable.
Chris Harris established Coldstone as a rural pottery in 1953. He was joined in 1958 by his son in-law Dieter Kunzemann and produced these decorative and domestic slipware dishes and other wares. The business closed in 1969.
Whilst this dish is 20th-century-made and falls outside our usual remit, we had to acquire this item, as it has not only been made by an iconic maker but the design harks back to wares produced centuries before.
Provenance - Unknown. Found within Norfolk. The back is impressed with the mark "Coldstone."
Condition - Good. No chips or cracks. Please refer to the images.
Size - Width 42 cm (16 1/2")
Reworking of traditional slipware designs and wares from the past centuries are sometimes seen and the quality of such can be varied.
Coldstone pottery was outstanding in this area and although only some 70 years old, their wares have become "iconic" in their own right and highly collectable.
Chris Harris established Coldstone as a rural pottery in 1953. He was joined in 1958 by his son in-law Dieter Kunzemann and produced these decorative and domestic slipware dishes and other wares. The business closed in 1969.
Whilst this dish is 20th-century-made and falls outside our usual remit, we had to acquire this item, as it has not only been made by an iconic maker but the design harks back to wares produced centuries before.
Provenance - Unknown. Found within Norfolk. The back is impressed with the mark "Coldstone."
Condition - Good. No chips or cracks. Please refer to the images.
Size - Width 42 cm (16 1/2")
Original: $1,090.37
-70%$1,090.37
$327.11Description
Reworking of traditional slipware designs and wares from the past centuries are sometimes seen and the quality of such can be varied.
Coldstone pottery was outstanding in this area and although only some 70 years old, their wares have become "iconic" in their own right and highly collectable.
Chris Harris established Coldstone as a rural pottery in 1953. He was joined in 1958 by his son in-law Dieter Kunzemann and produced these decorative and domestic slipware dishes and other wares. The business closed in 1969.
Whilst this dish is 20th-century-made and falls outside our usual remit, we had to acquire this item, as it has not only been made by an iconic maker but the design harks back to wares produced centuries before.
Provenance - Unknown. Found within Norfolk. The back is impressed with the mark "Coldstone."
Condition - Good. No chips or cracks. Please refer to the images.
Size - Width 42 cm (16 1/2")























