2.44K viewsPottery and Porcelain
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2.44K viewsPottery and Porcelain
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I have a Wedgwood plate that I could use some help dating. The plate shows very intricate floral patterns around the perimeter and an Asian scene as part of the central image. There are a couple of figures that appear to be Japanese to me. There is also a lake with some boats and a small town/city that has been highlighted in yellow in the background. The marks on the back of this plate are many. There is a 3 line mark in blue showing: “Wedgwood ~ Etruria England ~ Made in England” There is an impressed mark that reads “Made in England” above another string of impressed letters that I cannot decipher. There is the common impressed 3 part code – the first character is the month of manufacture and looks like a 3 (for March) – the middle symbol is the workman’s mark and looks like an M – the last character(s) are the year, and since this looks like a “Z” to me, it would mean either 1871 or 1897. Then, there is a mark that looks like the number 8 in a dotted like style. Next, there is a handwritten mark (above the glaze) in a reddish brown color that looks like “A4682, 19” to me. Finally, another stray blue mark (under glaze) that looks like either an M or a W.

Can anyone help me to decipher the markings on the back of this piece? I would really like to accurately represent the age when I go to sell it.

My photobucket link is: http://s1226.photobucket.com/user/larrylachanse/library/

Thanks in advance

mejayroe Changed status to publish January 22, 2020
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Thanks very much Andrew!!!

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Hi Martha,
the impressed mark ‘Made in England’ was mainly used after 1910.
As for the impressed 3M2 with the O below this is the date code. Originally 3 Letters were used but a 3 replaced the first letter in 1907, this continued until 1924 when the number changed to 4.

Therefore your plate dates 1910 – 1924. Unfortunately I cannot be more precise as there were frequent errors made when impressing the mark and I am unable to decipher the remaining code.

Regards
Andrew

OldeWorlde Antiques
[url=http://www.oldeworlde.co.uk]www.oldeworlde.co.uk[/url]

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Martha, thank you! Would appreciate any additional detail you can provide to more accurately determine the year (or decade) it was made. Also, are you familiar with the pattern?
Larry

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Your plate would not have been made before 1898 and more likely after 1908 !! Thats when Wedgwood added the Made in England to their mark !! 1898 to 1908 it was used occasionally but became standard in 1908 !! Most written above the glaze are decorators/mold/shape numbers !! Will check further later this evening. Have to pick up dog at the vets !!

mejayroe Changed status to publish January 22, 2020

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