Who is H J Colclough related to Stanley pottery?

Who is H J Colclough related to Stanley pottery?

Be aware there is NO connection with H.J. Colclough (see the main Colclough Bone China section) who had an interest in an earthenware works based at the Stanley Pottery, Longton (see Royal Stanley China).

Where is the Stanley China England pottery Mark?

STANLEY CHINA ENGLAND POTTERY MARK QUERY:- My maternal Aunt, a WW2 War Bride from England, is now 91 and living in Canada. Recently she gave me what remains of china which her grandmother, who was from Liverpool, had given to her as a wedding gift.

What is the stamp on a Stanley China teaset?

I have a huge teaset made by Stanley china, with a pattern number 3546 written in gold. The strange thing is the large plates have a different stamp on the bottom – they say James Green & Nephew, and underneath a street scene the words Queen Victoria Street St Pauls.

What kind of China did Colcloughs Royal Stanley make?

Colclough’s Royal Stanley was an earthenware maker, not a bone china plant like Amison, which needs specialist kilns. The short answer is, you have some very nice bone china – and quite rare. Hope this helps. p.s. The following page is a ‘must see’ if you are researching fine china – for value and identification:-

I have a huge teaset made by Stanley china, with a pattern number 3546 written in gold. The strange thing is the large plates have a different stamp on the bottom – they say James Green & Nephew, and underneath a street scene the words Queen Victoria Street St Pauls.

Be aware there is NO connection with H.J. Colclough (see the main Colclough Bone China section) who had an interest in an earthenware works based at the Stanley Pottery, Longton (see Royal Stanley China).

STANLEY CHINA ENGLAND POTTERY MARK QUERY:- My maternal Aunt, a WW2 War Bride from England, is now 91 and living in Canada. Recently she gave me what remains of china which her grandmother, who was from Liverpool, had given to her as a wedding gift.

Colclough’s Royal Stanley was an earthenware maker, not a bone china plant like Amison, which needs specialist kilns. The short answer is, you have some very nice bone china – and quite rare. Hope this helps. p.s. The following page is a ‘must see’ if you are researching fine china – for value and identification:-

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