Showing posts with label Herend. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Herend. Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

Mixing Herend for a Garden Table Setting: Welcome to the 158th Tablescape Thursday!

A few years ago I attended an historic home tour that was by far, the very best home tour I've ever been on.  It was in Newnan, Georgia and was sponsored by The Georgia Trust.  If you ever have an opportunity to go on one of their home tours, be sure to go.  They are well organized and the homes are always absolutely amazing!

On this particular Newnan tour, we visited a home where a china pattern completely stole my heart. The homeowner remembered the maker was Herend, but she couldn't remember the pattern.  After a little research, I discovered it was, Rothschild Bird-Green Border.  Unfortunately, the Rothschild Bird Green Border is a bit too expensive for my china budget.  A place setting is over $1,300!  But I was able to find a few salad plates on eBay of the regular Rothschild Bird (no border)  at a reasonable price.  (You can view that tablescape, HERE.)

Recently, my friend Cornelia, shared a gorgeous tablescape she created using beautiful Herend china.  She even mixed in a bit of my favorite Rothschild Bird...be still my heart!

Cornelia dined in her garden this day.



Come a little closer...





Already the beautiful floral centerpiece captures your heart...



Cornelia said, "The tablecloth was made by Solenzara in Hamburg using a French fabric, a Toile de Jouy pattern called “Artemis.”



Cornelia created this tablescape using several different Herend patterns.  I love that!  Table settings with mixed patterns are always a big favorite of mine.



Cornelia said, "The china is entirely Herend; I mixed several patterns together. Here you see two plates of Apponyi pattern (Flowers of the Indies)."



The cutlery is silver by Jezler/Switzerland.  The pattern is called "Centenaire."  The napkins are hand-embroidered vintage linen.









Cornelia said, "The champagne glass is German, hand-cut crystal. The wine glass is by Theresiental. The patten is called Minton. The small glass is French hand-cut crystal by la Cristallerie Lorraine.



Gorgeous floral centerpiece!



I wish we could breathe in the scent of these beautiful roses.



This vase is by Meissen...stunning!





Beautiful tablescape!



Cornelia set another lovely table in the garden for the coffee and dessert.





Another beautiful centerpiece of roses...



Cornelia shared, "The crystal liquor glasses are vintage."



"The cutlery is Silver by Jezler/Switzerland.  The pattern is called Centenaire. The tablecloth is hand-embroidered and vintage as well.  This pattern by Herend is New Osier."



"This pattern is called Persil.  On the right is a plate called Verger and on the left you see the famous Rothschild pattern."





Which setting would you choose for your coffee and dessert?  Would be a difficult choice, wouldn't it?  They are all so beautiful!





The coffee pot is in the Rothschild Bird pattern.  You can read all about the history of  Rothschild Bird pattern HERE.  Do you see the Baroness Rothschild's necklace?  Those naughty birds have taken it high up into the trees.  Love the story behind this pattern.  Love!





Cornelia, thanks so much for sharing these beautiful table settings all the way from your lovely garden in Switzerland.

To view another table setting using beautiful Herend, Rothschild Bird, click on Herend, Rothschild Bird.

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Saturday, 7 February 2009

Herend, Rothschild Bird...My New Obsession

So, there I was, on yet another historic home tour, minding my own business when Herend's, Rothschild Bird bit me in the nether regions! It all started out innocently enough.  We (me and two friends) had made the trek to Newnan, Georgia for what The Georgia Trust calls a "Ramble." And ramble we did...in and out of some of the most beautiful historic homes and buildings you've ever seen, not to mention a fabulous garden here and there.

And then it happened, the start of a new obsession. We were in the dining room of a lovely, very old and very beautiful home when I spotted this exquisite china in a corner china cabinet. I made a beeline as fast as my little feet would carry me, trying not to knock down everything and everyone in my path. I stood there gazing upon this magnificent china! I'm sure I heard birds singing, or maybe it was just my heart pounding as I drooled all over that corner cabinet. What ever it was, it was definitely LOVE at first site!





And this was one of those rare times when the owner of the home was actually present in the room. Normally I don't like that...it's a bit uncomfortable to oooh and aaah over the architecture or furnishings with your tour buds, when Mr. and Mrs. Homeowner are listening to your every word. But this day, I was happy Mrs. Homeowner was standing only five feet away. And I gushed, "Pray tell, what is this most amazing china?" Ok, I didn't quite say it that way, but I definitely gushed! She replied with a word I'm embarrassed to admit I'd never heard:  Herend.

Now, I know some of you are shocked that Tablescape Woman had never heard of Herend, but I hadn't. I suppose I've led a sheltered china life.  Later, when I began to learn more, I realized Herend was the maker of those adorable bunnies I had so often seen, but never, ever had I laid eyes on this china. This china combines my love for birds and china, with a little whimsy thrown in for fun!



I asked Mrs. Homeowner to repeat the name again, she probably thought I was a real doofus for not knowing the name, Herend. She repeated it.  I asked for the pattern name and she couldn't remember it! What? How could she not remember the pattern name of this wonderful china?
It was ok that she didn't know.  I knew I'd search high and low into the night to find that china...after all, this WAS to be my new obsession!  Mrs. Homeowner, casually mentioned it was still being made.  She forgot to mention I would need to mortgage my home to actually buy it!

I didn't get back home from our "ramble" until close to midnight and I was definitely a tired puppy, but straight to eBay, I did go. I was soooo excited when I found it on eBay, that is until I found out how much it cost! I had figured it might be a bit expensive, but I had no idea!

That night I found an entire set on eBay that included 8 or so place settings and several serving pieces.  My heart fell when I saw the starting price for the auction was set at $4,000, with the expected selling price thought to be around $8,000! Waaaaaaa! That's me crying 'cause there's no way I'm paying the price of a nice used car, for a set of china!

Over the last few months I have visited eBay, hoping and watching to see if a miracle might occur and the price for a plate, never mind a place setting, might be within range of what I'd be willing to pay.  No big, fat chance.

And if the china wasn't cute enough by itself, it also has the cutest story behind the design.  The story goes, this china was created for the Rothschild family of Europe in 1850 and is considered by connoisseurs to to be the epitome of hand painting on porcelain. The china is said to portray a 19th century tale about a Baroness Rothschild, who lost her pearl necklace in the garden of her Vienna residence. Several days later it was found by her gardener, who saw birds playing with it in a tree. Is that not just the cutest story?! If you look closely, you can see the little necklace up in the tree on the dinner plates I have pictured here.

All of the Herend porcelain is hand painted and trimmed in gold, hence the price. If you would like to visit the Herend website where I found the pic below, just click HERE.



The following pic is of "Rothschild Bird"...the pattern most commonly available on eBay and Neiman Marcus. A dinner plate cost $135 on NM's website...



This style below is like the china I saw in Newnan and is my favorite...it's called "Rothschild Bird, Green Border." This pic doesn't do it justice. The green is a gorgeous green...really pretty. It is a lot more expensive than the Rothschild Bird and almost never available on eBay.





It has the "fish net" design for which Herend is so well known. A dinner plate in "Rothschild Bird, Green Border" is $380 and Neiman Marcus doesn't even carry it online. That price is out of the Herend price guide I received in the mail recently. Herend has created 12 different "scenes" or motifs so you could have 12 place settings and each would be unique. I love that...but not so much the price.

Since I haven't robbed any banks or won the lottery, I am consoling myself by buying a few small, and I do mean small, pieces off eBay. So far I have collected this lovely little dish that I'm using to put my rings in each evening...



I found a sweet egg cup on eBay for $39.99, plus $7 for shipping. That same night I saw another egg cup just like it go for over $80 (not including the shipping) so I was happy with what I paid in a "Buy Now" auction.




Here's the other side.  Don't you just love all the little bugs and butterflies?



And here's a piece I just purchased last night.  It sells for $100 on many sites and is listed at $120 in Herend's price list. I got it for $18.50 plus $5 for shipping. Gotta love eBay!  You can see the necklace up in the trees in this piece.



Do we have any collectors of "Herend, Rothschild Bird" out there? Something tells me I won't be finding this at a garage sale or on Craig's list anytime soon.