馬桶套裝 - .925 銀 - 1861年
編號 88853713
杯 - .925 銀 - Grand Tour 銀色鍍金馬克杯
編號 88853713
杯 - .925 銀 - Grand Tour 銀色鍍金馬克杯
British 19th Century Victorian Glasgow antique 925 sterling silver mug.
Unique relief design, each side has a picture of the knight's war in the ancient Roman period.
Glasgow silver label
The letter F represents the year: 1876
Victorian Queen's tax portrait
The mouth rim is 10.4 cm high.
The handle is 12.5 cm high.
The mouth diameter is 7.5 cm.
Weight: 180 grams.
Capacity: 300 ml.
Current letter aristocratic custom model.
Given as a gift to a friend in 1888 years.
Glasgow silverware is rare in the market.
Adding this relief figure, the whole body is gilded inside and outside, which is even more rare and precious. A good collection.
Purchased at an Italian antique exhibition.
As the birthplace of European silverware, Britain has a history of more than 1,000 years. At first, silverware was mostly used in religious activities and the lives of the royal family and the nobility, and was a symbol of power and status. As the British silverware manufacturing process became more and more perfect, the use of silverware gradually became fashionable. In the Victorian period of the 19th century, British silverware developed to its heyday. At this time, silverware was ingeniously conceived, complicated but extremely exquisite, and a variety of crafts such as hammering, engraving, relief, hollowing, and inlaying were applied to produce a batch of highly artistic utensils. At the same time, some silverware craftsmen gradually attracted the attention of the royal family and the nobility and were sought after by all walks of life, and have always been favored by collectors around the world.
Abroad, the collection of silverware, especially the collection of European royal silverware, has been sought after by many collectors and has formed a complete mechanism system. Every year, international auction companies hold special auctions of antique silverware. Due to the limited number of high-quality silverware in existence, the price is not cheap. Especially in the upper class of Europe, collecting a piece of exquisite silverware made by a famous artist is a symbol of dignity and elegance.