$180.00
$1650.00
One would be hard-pressed indeed to find a better set of dinner forks.
$875.00
Frequent guests of our little website will know that I'm fond of gushing about what an exceptional job the Durgin Corporation did in recreating New Hampshire's natural flora with solid silver. These Cat Tails, with their "fuzzy" flower heads, are perhaps the prime example of that work...
P.O.R.
This spoon is not monogrammed and does not appear ever to have been, which is most unusual for early American silver.
French silver from this period is quite scarce. Price is for the total of eight pieces.
$165.00
$195.00
Price is for the pair.
$50.00
$225.00
George Blanchard left the employ of Arthur Stone in 1909 to start his own silversmithy. He was awarded "Master" status by the Boston Society of Arts and Crafts, and these spoons exemplify the exceptional quality of his work.
One has an extremely minor dimple in the bowl (visible almost exclusively from the reverse) which proved difficult to photograph, but you may see our best effort in the fourth photo.
Update: we have one odd fork available at, you guessed it, 25.00!
$125.00
$425.00
These are find, old pieces with excellent detail and die depth.
$150.00
$220.00
Though the three letter script monogram may not be traditional for Fairfax, these are nearly impossible to find.
$250.00
Of all the nineteenth century American flatware manufacturers, we have a particular fondness for Durgin. Their sensitivity to the natural world and ability to evoke it "in the metal" was uncanny...
$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.