I've been told that Lefton China is junk. More often than once. But I don't believe it. I find Lefton China all over the place, in beautiful patterns of dishwares to trinkets and utility type stuff.
What I don't find, is a thriving market for it on EBAY. At all. These must be the people who believe Lefton is junk because at my local Bid Board Auction Lefton pieces sell for a particularly good sum of money.
I guess it is all in location. In this part of the country, where people prefer to buy at auctions, Lefton is doing well. It's not doing so well elsewhere it seems!
This is a piece from a set I purchased at an estate sale in Biglerville, PA. I found the box containing all the pieces, 4 cups and snack plates, a cigarette holder, two ashtrays, and a teapot under a table, completely overlooked.
The snackplates and cups, ashtrays and cigarette holder are all still available on EBAY (March 2016). The teapot sold some time ago. This pattern is called Rose Chintz, and it was, at one time, all the rage in polite society.
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Are you collecting Royal Copenhagen yet?
Royal Copenhagen, a name that has been synonomous with quality for a few generations now, has never gone out of style.
The words "brand image" hadn't even really been used in business when this stuff was invented, but somehow, the Royal Copenhagen factory managed to rule the concept.
Often instantly recognizable by it's simple yet beautiful blue patterns and clean, white, ceramics, it is still produced and highly sought after.
Royal Copenhagen marks vary by year of production. As a result of the many varieties of marks they have been copied and forgeries of all pieces and marks are not uncommon.
In many cases, a prospective buyer can discern the forgeries from the real marks by understanding the system used. That topic would take up a few pages of writing and is better left to experts.
Another way to determine the authenticity is simply by looking the piece in question over and
answering a few basic questions. Does this piece have the right color? Is the quality of the painting similar to other pieces I have seen? Is the mark correct? Is it over or under the glaze?
Does this really feel like other pieces I have?
Just by examining those qualities you can determine, at least, the likelihood of your purchase being a good one.
For resale purposes, buying at the lowest price you can is always best, but beware buying modern pieces. Use your cell phone to look up marks or even bring a printout with you.
For collectors, the best time to buy Royal Copenhagen is when you find it! It is highly sought after and not likely to sit around long.
The piece pictured here I sold as a lidded sugar bowl and plate. It was purchased at an estate sale in Biglerville, PA, at a farm that had been in the same family for 200 years and the remaining family had decided to donate it to agricultural research.
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