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Antique Ridgeways Lonsdale Flow Blue Serving Bowl
There is a particular kind of blue that stops you in your tracks. Deep, dreamy, slightly blurred at the edges — the signature of Flow Blue, a transferware technique that gave Victorian England some of its most beloved tableware.
This antique serving bowl is Ridgeways Lonsdale c. 1891–1915, one of the most sought-after Flow Blue patterns of the late Art Nouveau and Edwardian era — recognized among collectors as a top ten desirable pattern in its category. The botanical motif trails across the surface in that unmistakable cobalt wash, framed by a sculpted scalloped edge with scrollwork detail. A piece with genuine history and genuine presence.
She measures 9.5" x 7.5" x 2" with one small chip on the underside of the rim, not visible from the front or top.
Tucked inside every set, a little something for first time customers — a hand-finished vintage passport notebook. Start the record. Note the piece, the moment, the person you gave it to. One day this bowl will sit in someone else's hands — and they'll know it came from yours.
There is a particular kind of blue that stops you in your tracks. Deep, dreamy, slightly blurred at the edges — the signature of Flow Blue, a transferware technique that gave Victorian England some of its most beloved tableware.
This antique serving bowl is Ridgeways Lonsdale c. 1891–1915, one of the most sought-after Flow Blue patterns of the late Art Nouveau and Edwardian era — recognized among collectors as a top ten desirable pattern in its category. The botanical motif trails across the surface in that unmistakable cobalt wash, framed by a sculpted scalloped edge with scrollwork detail. A piece with genuine history and genuine presence.
She measures 9.5" x 7.5" x 2" with one small chip on the underside of the rim, not visible from the front or top.
Tucked inside every set, a little something for first time customers — a hand-finished vintage passport notebook. Start the record. Note the piece, the moment, the person you gave it to. One day this bowl will sit in someone else's hands — and they'll know it came from yours.