View allAll Photos Tagged flatware
Learn more about this table setting : Sitting in Blue Lagoon
Featuring : Plume Dinnerware by Jars Ceramics and Chilewich Basketweave Placemats
Found one full place setting of a starburst flatware I'd never come across before - marked Dixon Deluxe Stainless Japan. Also found 2 serving spoons marked Tradition Stainless USA Misty Isle - I like the cute floral-esque pattern on these.
Personalized Baby Spoons. The perfect keepsake. The perfect baby shower gift. Simple and sweet. Heirloom-quality stainless steel baby spoon is hand-stamped with love.
Playing around with all the pieces and layering before gluing and grouting requires much more thought and planning that one might think. It's an interesting process, but I really need to take Kelley's class.
MATERIALS: stained glass scraps and recycled stainless steel flatware on salvaged mirror on top of 'environmental' MDF. The size is only 8" x 11". "Steel Grass" is a colloquial term for bamboo, which is a grass and grows strong as steel here in the tropics.
Learn more about this table setting : Faint Floral Tones
Features Sarjaton Dinnerware by iittala , Polylin Table Linen by Libeco Home and Chilewich Bamboo Placemats
Personalized Baby Fork and Spoon Set. Make your toddler feel extra special with her/his very own flatware that looks just like Mom and Dad's. Cute, cute, cute! The heirloom-quality stainless steel fork and spoon set is hand-stamped with love. Personalize it with the child's name.
kitchen • 15 Jan 2006
Place setting with bowl on largest plate. Nice french gourmet feel to these that I love. Simple, glossy and creamy with nice wide edges for decorating (you know, if you were in the mood), they let the food take center stage. No photos here of the "good" flatware (Gorham "Studio" silverplate); it's still in a box in the garage. God only knows which box. Fabulous (non-)pattern though.
Dishes: Barratts (pattern-what pattern?-unknown)
Flatware: William Fraser "Artisan" (New version)
P1050365
Bought years ago on the Amsterdam flea market.
First KLM-logo, Dirk Roosenburg, 1919.
Marked: G SOLA Z.
Made by SOLA, Zeist, Netherlands.
In 1961 a new logo was launched.
A set of three 2 prong forks, circa 1800s, with wood handles and steel tines. After a bidding war on ebay they are all mine!
Egypt, looks very similar to the Lufthansa spoon
www.flickr.com/photos/airlinespoons/59052532/
12,9cm
So, I have this thing for mugs (and cookware, dishware, stemware, flatware ... cutlery). Last fall, I noticed these coffee mugs at the place where I get my hair worked on. To most it looks like a run-of-the mill white mug. But it's not! The well is the perfect size -- it's tall and narrow, but holds just the right amount of coffee. And the handle -- just look at the shape of the handle! You don't see it? Well, I do. But here's the thing: I didn't see them anywhere else.
For months I've looked, but have not been able to find anything that comes close to this mug. So last night, after learning my stylist is moving to a new salon, and after realizing I need to take a PAD, I decided to take a picture of them (and take action).
The salon owner walked by while I was snapping photos of the mugs, so I explained how perfect I thought they were. She said the previous owner got them from a restaurant that closed. I said, "Aha! I should have known to check with a restaurant supplier."
Together, we looked at the mug. I sighed. She ran some numbers. Literally, she started punching buttons on the adding machine behind the counter. We negotiated.
After reaching an agreement, she carefully packed my mugs (I bought four of them).
The best part of the evening (besides obtaining these wonderful drinking vessels)? Watching other foil-wrapped clients walk up to the coffee station and look, quizically, at the remaining mugs. They tried, but they didn't see it either.
Osso buco alla Milanese (with saffron risotto), asparagus, and a nice Gigondas. Our inagural use of our new Fjord flatware!
support pie plate, varied flatware, and receptacles two of candles fire chambers dishes serving as oculars.
Cool flatware I found digging in the silverware boxes at the Salvation Army. I couldn't find any knives though. I haven't been able to identify it. It is just marked Stainless Steel Japan and has a mark that looks like a U on a pedestal with an upside down T going through it. It might be a knock off of the Georg Jensen flatware.