27- Occupied japan bamboo Plates CHINA VINTAGE bamboo
Price: $199.99
If you have this set this is a great addition to have
FLAWLESS CONDITION!!! no chips, no cracks, no repairs
you are bidding on 9 large dinner plates
cream and sugar w/ lid
2 tea / coffee cup saucers
1 coffee cup
1 bowl
2 dessert plates
8 salad plates!!
A BEAUTIFUL EXAMPLE OF JAPANESE POTTERY.
THE CERAMIC IS DONE IN A SWIRLING PATTERN YOU CAN ACTUALLY FEEL THE ROPING EFFECT.
VERY STURDY AND DETAILED.
UCAGCO- "Bamboo" Pattern Cups and Saucers
Made in Occupied Japan
Made sometime around the 1950's
Would look great as a decorative piece or as a actual dinner pieces used in house
or for special occasions.
Would be great for decoration in Japanese restaurant.
Pieces are used but are still in great condition.
Total size of plates are a width of 6.75" with a height of 1.25"
Dimensions of the cups are width of 4.25" with a height of 2.25"
Interesting history of UCAGCO:
UCAGCO stands for United China and Glass Company. Its US offices were based in New Orleans and New York. Ucagco was primarily a distributor of dinnerware and glassware. They were the distributor of many Japanese china patterns during the early 1950's. United China & Glass Co. Inc., better known as UCAGCO, dating back to 1850. Founded by Abe Mayer and originally called Abe Mayer & Co., the importer did business throughout the Southeast U.S. as well as Central and South America. It wasn't until the 30s that the company took on the official trademark of UCAGCO and began expanding overseas. In fact, after the war, the company's agent in Japan, S.A. Stolaroff signed the very first contract allowing imports from Japan. A talented ceramic designer himself, Stolaroff worked alongside many Japanese potteries to lead the company's line of ceramics. In 1956, UCAGCO was sold to Sammons Enterprises.
THANK YOU
NICE set BEAUTIFUL ANTIQUE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NO DAMAGE anywhere!!!! FLAWLESS!!!
no chips no cracks no repairs
details are absolutly stunning (may have to zoom to see it)