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Adrienne T. Boggs

Albuquerque, NM

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Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
Windermere by Thomas Furnival & Sons
  • Thomas Furnival & Sons
  • Windermere, c. 1871-1890
  • Earthenware
  • 7.5 x 5.5 in (19.05 x 13.97 cm)
  • Not For Sale
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Sugar Bowl, 7.5 x 5.5 inches. Red transfer. Printed maker's mark for Thomas Furnival & Sons. This sheet pattern consists of a background of ivy vines and geranium leaves. Rectangular cartouches with the corners cut off are laid over this background sheet. Every cartouche features one of two repeating images. One image consists of two figures in a small boat on a lake with shoreline in the foreground and background. The other consists of an empty boat on a lack next to the shoreline with the opposite shoreline and a distant mountain in the background. The pattern name "Windermere" could be a reference to a very large lake near the small town of Windermere in the south Lake District of Cumbria, England. This pattern was also produced by Ford & Riley.

Following involvement in previous partnerships, from 1851 Jacob and Thomas Furnival became partners at J & T Furnival. As well as earthenware manufacturers, they were in business as Grinders of Potters’ Materials at Etruria Vale, in the borough of Hanley. In 1859 Jacob Furnival, Thomas Furnival, and Francis Joseph Emery applied for a patent for “Improvements in apparatus for supporting articles of china and earthenware in kilns and ovens.” In May 1864 the partnership between Jacob and Thomas Furnival was dissolved and the business was continued by Thomas Furnival. Around 1871, Thomas Furnival the younger joined the business which became Thomas Furnival and Son. In 1876, another son, Samuel Bourne Furnival joined the business, which became Thomas Furnival and Sons. Around 1883 the company found itself in financial difficulty with liabilities of £60,000 (around £5 million in 2020 terms). In 1884 there was a notice of “Liquidation by Agreement” which allowed the company to trade out of its difficulties. Thomas Furnival Sr. retired in 1890 and the business was continued by his sons Thomas, Samuel, and Arthur. The style of the business became Furnivals.

  • Subject Matter: Aesthetic (Cartouche)
  • Collections: Aesthetic Transferware, Thomas Furnival & Sons

Other Work From Adrienne T. Boggs

Windermere by Ford & Riley
Westmeath by Alfred Meakin
Wild Flowers by Sampson Hancock
Wild Flowers by Sampson Hancock
Wild Flowers by Sampson Hancock
Wild Flowers by Sampson Hancock
Wild Rose by Powell, Bishop & Stonier
Windsor by S. Fielding & Co.
Windsor by S. Fielding & Co.
Water-Lilly by Josiah Wedgwood
See all artwork from Adrienne T. Boggs
 

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