$75.00
The hooked tine has a chamfered edge, which initially led me to believe that this was a pastry fork, and it would serve that purpose well.
$250.00
This is a big, splashy looking server which will make a wonderful wedding gift for a couple with a solid sense of style.
Marked as shown in fourth enlargement.
Size matters, in a soup spoon. Why settle for a small one?
Again, for those of you like me who favor comparison shopping, compare on ebay (item 363480057160) @87.00
$320.00
This lovely old high relief pattern is one of R & B's best designs.
These are benchmark examples, looking today just as they did upon leaving the factory on Elmwood Avenue some hundred and fifty years ago. They are engraved (slightly differently) in an exceptionally well designed and well executed manner upon all three sides...
$210.00
Those folks who Replace your stuff have given this pattern the prosaic name of "WHS9", but we don't believe them for a minute. Engraved patterns such as this, if they had a name, were often known by number, for example "Antique Engraved number 7." They involved hours of skilled, exacting work by craftsmen who were paid more than most of their peers...
$275.00
$33.00
If you've been slurping your soup with a stainless steel spoon, it's time to leave the halls of heathendom, email us your order, and begin the year anew as a civilized being!
$95.00
$295.00
Also available as a set of twelve, at a slightly more attractive price.
$240.00
For those of you who favor comparison shopping, check out prices (69.00 each) over there on the Bay of Ease.
$295.00
This pattern gets much less love than its close relatives Iris and New Art, but is every bit as finely detailed and well executed as either one of those.
On Hold
These are truly a choice find!
An underrated manufacturer, Watson had exceptionally talented die sinkers who were capable of producing flatware with fine detail and high relief. This spoon showcases their talent perfectly.
Those of you with long memories will remember when Martha Stewart featured some of our "finds" in her article (Glints of Genius, pp 154-9, November 2008) about collecting bright cut silver. This item is of a higher quality than anything which is pictured there...
$1,450.00
Little is known about La Paglia himself, though Dorothy Rainwater relates (see Silver Magazine, May/June 1995, item pictured in article) that he worked as a spy during WWII, and was smuggled into and out of Italy on board a submarine...
For those of you who wonder what that unusual symbol between the Whiting trademark and "sterling" might mean, we suspect that is a letter h inside a circle, meaning 'heavy,' since these weigh a bit more than the average Lily butter spreader...
$475.00
Compare on Ebay (item 402083609300) @1037.00