Saturday, August 8, 2015

The Elusive Heirloom Platter

Remember that very special platter that Hick was worried about? The one that my grandma left to my mother, the off-white platter with lots of cracks that weren't really cracks, but a sign of oldness evidenced in that very special platter, the platter that should have a sticky note on the bottom saying it was from my grandma, for my mom?

Here it is:



Yeah. That's all we've found that even remotely resembles Hick's description. No note on the bottom, but one inside. Which may or may not have been referring to this very dish. Not exactly a platter. Not exactly sure WHAT it is. I guessed a soup tureen. What say you? Or, "What say you'uns?" as Mom would have phrased it. Here's another angle.



And while you're at it...what is that silver thing beside it? It is very light. Like aluminum. Don't know what you'd put in there. The outside and bottom looks like it was hammered out by a metalsmith, if there is such a thing. Regular little indentations, like from a rubber or wooden mallet. That thing got very chilly sitting there on the table. My idea was it functioned as an ice bucket. My sister the ex-mayor's wife disagreed. In fact, she guffawed and haw-hawed and naw-nawed me nearly out the door. Still. She didn't have any idea what it was. It would not have been used for hot dishes, because they would cool so fast in that thin metal. And remember those colorful aluminum glasses so popular in the 1960s? They kept beverages REALLY cold, by forming that condensation that ran down the side to soak whatever surface you set it on. At least I used logic. Even though, if the dish is old, there was not exactly a plethora of ice cubes waiting to be dropped into drinks.

Oh, and behind my favorite purse of Mom's, through that sliver of space by the chair, you can see an arm of the hideous ceramic cherub that balances a bird-bath-looking bowl on its head, formerly filled by Mom with plastic flowers, that Hick wants to bring home. Let the record show that it was made by my grandma, probably just glazed by her in her early crafty ceramic years. Maybe Hick's Little Barbershop of Horrors clientele can wash their fingers in it. Or their hair.

Whew! Enough for now. I'm exhausted from a full day of arm-wrestling Sis over my fair share of bottle openers and hot pads and parfait cups.

12 comments:

  1. Aluminum was very popular in the 40's. I have an aluminum tray from that period. Don't know what your Mother's thing was for.

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    1. My husband Hick says he has a bunch of hammered aluminum pieces down at his cabin, which I suppose he purchased at the auction in lieu of that box labeled Auction Meat. Still. I'm sure he doesn't have anything as cool as this one.

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  2. Here's what I found on line: Vintage hammered aluminum ice bucket with lovely floral design on the lid, floral handles and floral knob on top.
    The dish IS a soup tureen. Treasures to be fought over :)

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    1. I found it! The exact one! Some call it an ice bucket, some call it a casserole dish. And I KNEW I was right on that tureen. Or platter, heh, heh.

      Sis and the ex-mayor and Hick and I will have a battle royale for the dispensation of these two pieces. Or...we might flip a coin.

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  3. I guess the time will come when people will be sifting through all the things we've accumulated over the years and saying: "What the heck was so special about that?"

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    1. Or we could just live in an uncluttered sterile environment, gazing at smooth white walls, and save them the trouble.

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  4. Are there any marks on the bottom of the Bowl to indicate the maker. It does look old and may be worth a bit.

    Looks to me like an Antique HAVILAND LIMOGES BRETAGNE Hand Painted Lidded Soup Tureen. Worth $200 or more if in fine condition.

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    1. By JOE, I think you're onto something!

      I have not looked on the bottom, because Sis was watching me like a hawk after a little soft mouse, and I do not dare go back to Mom's house without her permission and an escort of Price Waterhouse accountants to hold me accountable.

      I searched that description, and found one exactly like it! Ours has some of the gold worn off the handle, but it's still on the side, though not showing in the picture.

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  5. That tureen could be Wedgewood. But I'm no judge.

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    1. Well, I'm JUDGE, soon-to-be-jury, and would-be executioner...but I don't know if it's Wedgewood. It belonged to my dad's grandma. Not sure where she got it.

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  6. I agree. It looks like an ice bucket to me. But perhaps you need to take it to the Antiques Roadshow. When you get tickets, you're allowed to bring TWO things. What treasure would Hick bring along?

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    1. Why take it to Antiques Roadshow when Antiques Roadshow has already come to Val?

      Hypothetically speaking, though...Hick would, of course, bring the greatest treasure he can get his hands on, which is VAL!

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