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Vintage Wedgwood Bamboo Tea Service

Vintage Wedgwood Bamboo Tea Service

$125.00

Acquired from a devoted Wedgwood collector, this enchanting Vintage Wedgwood Bamboo Tea Service instantly captured our hearts. Complete with teapot, creamer, and sugar, the design is a celebration of nature’s quiet elegance. On the delicately rendered teapot, sugar, and creamer, vertical bamboo stalks form the body of each piece, while delicate, hand applied terracotta colored leaves unfurl from the joints.

Both beautiful and practical, this charming jasperware service carries Wedgwood's fine legacy of studied elegance. Produced in the delicate primrose palette, this beautiful and highly collectible trio makes a lovely gift for any Wedgwood collector or a wonderful beginning your own. With its sleek lines and smart design, the set makes an elegant presentation whether paired with contemporary decor, or featured in more traditional settings.


Original price $225. Strictly one of a kind and subject to prior sale. In very good vintage condition. Teapot: 8.5"D x 5"H. Sugar: 3.25"D x 4"H. Creamer: 5.5"D x 3.25"H.

Learn More About Jasperware

A type of fine-grained, unglazed stoneware introduced by the English potter Josiah Wedgwood in 1775, Jasperware derives its name from the fact that it resembles the natural stone jasper in its hardness.  

Jasper is white in its natural state and is stained with metallic oxide coloring agents. The most common shade is a pale blue commonly known as Wedgwood blue, but dark blue, lilac, sage green, black, and yellow were also used. 

Decorations, typically Neoclassical in style and usually white, were made in separate molds and applied to the body of the piece. Objects made of jasper were varied and included not only biscuit barrels, but also vases, plaques, cameos, furniture mounts, and portrait medallions.

Learn More About Wedgwood & Jasperware

A type of fine-grained, unglazed stoneware introduced by the English potter Josiah Wedgwood in 1775, Jasperware derives its name from the fact that it resembles the natural stone jasper in its hardness. White in its natural state, jasper is stained with metallic oxide coloring agents to produce the most exquisite shades. While the most common shade seen today is pale blue, dark blue, lilac, sage green, black, and yellow were also produced using the same methods. 

Applied embellishments were made in separate molds and applied by hand to the body of the piece. Objects made of jasper were quite varied, from biscuit barrels and vases, to trinket boxes, urns, plaques, cameos and other jewelry, furniture mounts, and diminutive portrait medallions.

What began as an ambitious dream of Josiah Wedgwood became one of Britain's most iconic names in fine china. From the very beginning, Wedgwood seemed to do things just right.  In 1765 - a mere six years after beginning production of a richly glazed cream-colored earthenware designed to rival fine porcelain, Wedgwood was given royal consent by England's Queen Charlotte to call the product "Queen's Ware." As stylish consort to revolutionary-era king, George III, as well as a satisfied customer, this lofty endorsement led to an explosion in popularity for the young business.

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