FIT FOR KING,QUEEN! 8 PEWTER ARMETALE PLACE SETTINGS- DISHES, GOBLETS for sale in Osprey, Florida

$1,200

EMAIL OR CALL .
SOLD AS A LOT OF 40 ITEMS.
EIGHT FABULOUS FIVE-PIECE PLACE SETTINGS - WILTON ARMETALE PEWTER METAL OCTAGONAL PLATE, BOWL, GOBLET, COFFEE MUG WITH REMOVABLE PORCELAIN LINER, AND OCTAGONAL NAPKIN RING!
THESE GORGEOUS DISHES HAVE HEFT AND CHARACTER! THEY LOOK MEDIEVAL AND FIT FOR ROYALTY! MORE THAN 40 YEARS OLD AND STILL GREAT LOOKING!
THEY CAN BE MACHINE WASHED AS THEY HAVE BEEN MANY TIMES - THEY JUST LOOK BETTER AND BETTER WITH AGE.
RARE PATTERN OF PLATES, BOWLS AND NAPKIN RINGS IS OCTAGONAL - LATER RENAMED MULBERRY HILL.
PATTERN OF GOBLETS AND MUGS IS PLOUGH TAVERN.
PLATES HEAT BEAUTIFULLY FOR STEAKS AND SEAFOOD.
Armetale brand products won't break, crack, chip or dent under normal use. Also, Armetale metal is non-toxic so you can eat and drink from it!!!! Wilton's pattern is based on a design by the English pewter George Bacon who was active in the early 1800s. Bacon was himself inspired by a French design dating to 1720. First released about 1968 under the name OCTAGONAL, it was renamed MULBERRY HILL in 1982.
Wilton Armetale products are cast using a painstaking process called sand molding, where an impression formed in sand is filled with the molten Armetale metal. A select number of items are made in a similar fashion, using die casting.
Features:
?Durable - won't crack, chip or dent
?Oven and freezer safe - cook and heat foods in it
?Freezer and refrigerator safe - freeze or chill foods in it
?Non-toxic - safe for cooking and serving foods
?Easy care - easy to clean, requires no polishing
?Do not use in microwave
?Dinner Plate 10 3/4"
?Soup bowl 12 oz., 1 1/2 inches tall and 7 1/2 deep.
OCTAGONAL (later edition called MULBERRY HILL)
The Octagonal series was fashioned by Mr. Tom Stauffer in the Wilton Armetale
Pattern Department and is patterned after an original piece by the English pewterer,
George Bacon. Though Bacon worked in the early 1800s, this vast collection is
remarkably contemporary. Bacon was considered a "Sad Ware Man" which is to say that
he made larger pieces than the "Holloware Man" or the "Trifler". Mr. Stauffer fashioned
this collection on Bacon's 10 1/2" double-reeded plate. The earliest series of the
transitional offerings, these pieces are at home in an American Colonial environment as
they are in the most sophisticated contemporary settings, and were introduced in the late
1960s.


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