Potpourri (circa 1875) by Mintons.
Bone china.
Image and text information courtesy The Met.
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Potpourri (circa 1875) by Mintons.
Bone china.
Image and text information courtesy The Met.

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Minton & Co The stoning of St. Stephen
Sandwich tile, red earthenware between buff, inlaid with red, white and green with a clear glaze on the white and green only, 30.5 x 30.5 cm, ca. 1850-60
Ceramic Box in the Shape of a Turtle, Manufacturer: Minton and Company, 1871
Yale University Art Gallery
Provenance: Helene Fortunoff, North Hills, N.Y., by 2015; Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Conn.
2 1/2 × 4 3/4 × 3 1/4 in. (6.35 × 12.07 × 8.26 cm)
Mintons was a major pottery company at the Staffordshire Potteries which was founded by Thomas Minton (1765–1836) in 1793. It became highly popular during the Victorian era and remained and independent business until 1968. Mintons produced various ceramic designs in Historicist styles using different decorative techniques. Apart from vessels and sculptures the firm also manufactured tiles and other architectural ceramics for both the Houses of Parliament in London and United States Capitol.
[text source: @wikipedia]
A pair of Minton painted porcelain plaques in the Sandringham Museum.

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Lobster Bisque soup in a Mintons seaweed pattern soup plate from the 1870s. I loaned dinnerware from my collection for Judith Choate’s book on the history of Delmonico’s Restaurant published about 15 years ago by Abrams.
Streets of Harlem: Minton’s Playhouse, a revival of the famous Harlem jazz club, on West 118th Street between Adam Clayton Powell Jr Blvd. and St. Nicholas Blvd. in Harlem, upper Manhattan
Stanley Turrentine, Up at Minton's [1961] Blue Note
Stanley Turrentine - tenor saxophone Grant Green - guitar Horace Parlan - piano George Tucker - bass Al Harewood - drums
Alfred Lion - producer Reid Miles - design Rudy Van Gelder - engineer Francis Wolff - photography