What do you need to know about replacement China?

What do you need to know about replacement China?

Our specialty is replacement china with unique, individualized customer service and low prices, pure and simple. Our Goal is to provide the best customer service and the finest quality replacement china and tableware for the lowest prices anywhere.

Where to buy china, crystal and flatware?

We also buy from individuals who are looking for a reputable dealer where to sell china, crystal and flatware. Private estates and individuals sell dinnerware to Classic Replacements for minimum hassle and maximum profit.

Where can I find discontinued and replacement China?

Our Goal is to provide the best customer service and the finest quality replacement china and tableware for the lowest prices anywhere. We will also be glad to find any discontinued china or tableware pattern you might be interested in, obscure or hard to find as it may be.

Can you sell your China at classic replacements?

At Classic Replacements, it is our pleasure to help you sell your China and Tableware items hassle-free and for the best price. Unfortunately, we have been swamped by many requests that are either irrelevant to what we buy (not tableware for example) or by people not wishing to sell but just want to know the value of their items.

Our specialty is replacement china with unique, individualized customer service and low prices, pure and simple. Our Goal is to provide the best customer service and the finest quality replacement china and tableware for the lowest prices anywhere.

Our Goal is to provide the best customer service and the finest quality replacement china and tableware for the lowest prices anywhere. We will also be glad to find any discontinued china or tableware pattern you might be interested in, obscure or hard to find as it may be.

How old are the marks on Chinese porcelain?

Some porcelain I have found in Singapore marked in such way, the dealers have been very adamant that it dated to the 1970s.

What do the marks on a piece of China mean?

Often times a piece of china will bear two marks in this way: one beneath the glaze, indicating the factory that produced the blank, and the second above the glaze indicating the decorator. Much Haviland china, for example, bears the green underglaze mark “Haviland France,” and the red decorators stamp: “Haviland & Co. Limoges.”

Some porcelain I have found in Singapore marked in such way, the dealers have been very adamant that it dated to the 1970s.

Often times a piece of china will bear two marks in this way: one beneath the glaze, indicating the factory that produced the blank, and the second above the glaze indicating the decorator. Much Haviland china, for example, bears the green underglaze mark “Haviland France,” and the red decorators stamp: “Haviland & Co. Limoges.”

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