Welcome, friends, to another fun-filled Thrill of the Hunt post where I share my latest thrifty (and usually) vintage finds with you.
Normally I share pretty much random items that I've recently acquired through my thrifting travels. But today I'm starting a min-series of sorts to highlight the most lovely blue and white porcelain pieces I've been lucky enough to either be gifted or find over the past few months. The collection is large, so this mini-series will consist of at least 4 installments.
I was beyond stoked when I found this blue and white porcelain hen on nest at my local quarterly estate sale for $7.00. While I've managed to collect many blue and white porcelain pieces, this was a new one for me.
Not only did it check the box for blue and white porcelain, it checked the box for my hen on nest collection as well!
Hen on nests have been around for over 150 years, although most of them are made of glass -- which is what made this one all the more special since it's made of porcelain.
I can even use the very pretty base alone as a bowl without the hen lid.
This is by no means my first vintage hen on nest. I have a cobalt blue hen on nest, milk glass hen on nest, mini porcelain hen on nest and clear glass hen on nest.
I've collected so many I need to do a "hen on nest collection" blog post!
While this beauty is technically my daughter's, I had to add it to this Thrill of the Hunt blue and white series.
I was with her when she bought it. We were on a girls' shopping trip to a local vintage emporium.
When she grabbed it and said she had to have it I knew I'd taught her well! Our garden hydrangeas look beautiful in it!
There is a blurred makers mark on the bottom that I'll have to investigate. It looks like two lions -- which reminds me of many of the English pottery pieces I've collected over the years.
TIP: If you plan on using a pitcher as a vase, you can always fill a large plastic cup with water and place that into the pitcher, then add the flowers. That way your pitcher stays clean from dirty floral water and gunk and you can feel confident using it as a drink pitcher.
It's an embossed Tom Fillery's Rum & Butter Toffee Tin, with a Greco-Roman design and hinged lid.
The lid shows a woman playing a lyre. The sides show an image of a woman in a garden. It appears that the company was established in 1923 in England.
I can see me using it for, well, candy of course, and other seasonal goodies like mini pumpkins or bottle brush trees! Stay tuned to find out!
Well, that's it for today, friends!
I hope you've enjoyed reading
Thrill of the Hunt #128:
Blue And White Series #1
and that I've inspired you in some way.
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Kathleen, Absolutely gorgeous pieces, I'm always so happy to see blue and white ceramics. I had to laugh when you you said you knew you taught your daughter well because it's my goal for all our kids to be great thrifters and I had a moment like that as well. The other day my son who's a Freshman in college called me from the thrift store. He had taken a bunch of his new friends out thrifting for the first time! :)
That was me as anonymous, sorry still figuring this blog thing out! :)
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