

A closer look at the items on top shows some family heirlooms. The oil lamp and the china dish were grandma's. The wood bowls were made on my grandpa's wood lathe from wood taken from a log cabin owned by the Miller family in our township. The brown glass bottles were found in the nearby Toussaint River. I found the white glass hen dish at Lene's Web two years ago. It doesn't have a knick on it.

This is the maker's mark on the back of the china dish. I've never researched it but I'm sure it's a common pattern. Grandma never bought anything really expensive. She was a very thrifty person.


Oh, that dish is gorgeous! Love the colors. My mom had a milk glass hen like that. She kept those little pink creamy peppermint disk candies in it. I always hated those things.
ReplyDeleteI'm expecting a box any day now!
Susan, ah yes, that box is being put together as we speak. I hated those mints too. My son loves those little square mints, the kind you often find at weddings. I think they're horrible!
ReplyDeleteI love these old sewing cabinets. The many drawers and secret compartments are great for storing little things. I have mine by my door with a strange assortment of gloves, napkins, hot pads, stamps and notecards.
ReplyDeleteI wish I could tell you who made your pretty dish, but I haven't been able to find that mark.
ReplyDeleteI did, however, find out that the numbers on the back (registration numbers)show that your dish's pattern was registered sometime between 1902 and 1903. So it is definitely an antique!
Janice
VioletSky, Aren't they handy little cabinets? I'm so glad I have this one.
ReplyDeleteJanice, Wowwee! That dish is pretty old! I'll have to try to find the maker.
Just lovely. I have that same chicken - and a flock of tinier ones - they often sit on my sideboard.
ReplyDelete