View allAll Photos Tagged flatware
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.
Angie and Michel Tersiguel pose for a portrait among stacked flatware and painting supplies as Charlie Risselada, head waiter and artist, repaints walls at Tersiguel's French Country Restaurant in Ellicott City, Md., on Sept. 27, 2016. Flooding on July 30 blew through the basement windows of the restaurant as the kitchen buzzed with activity upstairs, causing the restaurant to close for repairs. (Photo by Leslie Boorhem-Stephenson/Chesapeake Bay Program)
USAGE REQUEST INFORMATION
The Chesapeake Bay Program's photographic archive is available for media and non-commercial use at no charge.
To request permission, send an email briefly describing the proposed use to requests@chesapeakebay.net. Please do not attach jpegs. Instead, reference the corresponding Flickr URL of the image.
A photo credit mentioning the Chesapeake Bay Program is mandatory. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way or used in any way that suggests approval or endorsement of the Chesapeake Bay Program. Requestors should also respect the publicity rights of individuals photographed, and seek their consent if necessary.
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.
Silver spoons, baby rattles and teething rings helped keep babies healthy...silver kills germs. MotherPie article on it Born with a Silver Spoon...
The exhibit on through October at the Cooper Hewitt Design Museum (in NYC in Andrew Carnegie's home), part of the Smithsonian, on the social commentary history of flatware is interesting.
Afghanistan, with the late 1960s logo on back, founded in 1955, grounded in 2001, now flying again,
13,6cm
Pop's house... they don't play around. This is a the normal Sunday night dinner place settings. They don't even own "everyday" china, stemware, or flatware. Seems kinda fussy, but either use it or loose it, I say.