View allAll Photos Tagged restaurantware

Switched out my dishes and brought up all the tan. Put up the Space Needle plate.

Nice Anchor Hocking Soreno large amber bowl-60's and a Shenango deco pattern restaurant plate plus a tailless cat vase-3 bucks. I used the salad bowl immediately on arrival at Clara's birthday.

I was out taking pictures with my wide angle lens, and decided to try a close up with it. Meh... needs more practice.

These are some purple green beans, and they were delicious. After you boil them they turn green, and the water is lightly purple. :)

 

Crudites,rosemary salami (from Salumi), pickled radishes

Retro style HoJo's dinner

Vintage 1980's Howard Johnson's Restaurantware. Mfg. Buffalo China Co.

The plates are aqua; they look lighter blue than they really are.

This is a subset of our restaurant china collection (plus 2 more, not pictured). I really like vintage restaurantware with log letters and/or a log motif.

 

Fred's Hickory Barbecue was a chain of restaurants in the Dallas, TX, area in the 1950's.

I've eaten at the Old Hickory House (started in 1955 with one remaining location still in business in the Atlanta area), but I don't know anything about the other two restaurants.

Served on Buffalo restaurantware china Kenmore pattern from the 1960s

► Close-up of Shenango's Well of the Sea on Peter Terris sugar bowls, circa mid '50s.

This year red and red airbrush along with some black.Green line, Shadowleaf and a few others are on display year round

My morning bowl of Cheerios using restaurantware, a Sterling East Liverpool plain white bowl that holds a cup and weighs 1.05lbs. My coffee is in an unmarked green stripe cup that contains 3/4 cup of coffee and weighs 1.03 lbs. It is gratifying to know that if one has breakfast and is attacked by wolves, your breakfast china's weight allows you to use them as a defense weapon.

This modern Lyrica pattern was produced by Homer Laughlin and we had them in our coffee shop back in the 1990s. Estimated to be from the 1970s.

► Wallace China restaurant plate, Sea Play, also seen as Palisades.

This year airbrush and red.

Except for a few special pieces the tan is in the basement awaiting the return of autumn

“For it was not into my ear you whispered, but into my heart. It was not my lips you kissed, but my soul.”

~ Judy Garland (Yep. That Judy Garland.)

 

Gary put this out on the counter this morning for me. It was in a new box of strawberries bought yesterday. The berry looks like it's floating but it really is just sitting in one of my restaurantware china bowls. An odd illusion and I doubt I could replicate it, but I'm happy with the "gift" of this image and the sentiments it has evoked.

 

He said, "I knew you'd love this and would want to take a picture of it to put up on flickr." ;o)

It was an "awwwww" moment for me.

 

Sigh. NO one knows me as well as he does. He pays attention. That's really all it takes.

Scored on ebay for 9.99 the pair one day when everyone else must have been asleep

This is the extent of the wall in my kitchen that adjoins the dining room. The rest of the wall is a swinging door.

► Shenango, Well of the Sea restaurant ware, circa mid '50s.

► Restaurant plate, Driftwood by Syracuse.

Yeah- there's a lot. Huffing them up and down the basement stairs makes for an excellent work out as I switch out portions seasonally. In Explore Oct 7 -08

Dancers & Watermelon background

An old store fixture, has a cool little plaque-property of Burke Store Fixture.Holds a ton! For real as restaurantware is heavy.Musty the bottlecap guy hides up in the top corner.

In Explore Mar.24-08

First time I've seen this fleur-de-lis pattern. I bought 4 saucers for $1.00. I don't know what the cups look like. I paired it with this plain white microwavable Pyrex cup.($.25)

I loved the subtle monotone here. Very little processing.

Hotel sugarbowl (so nice & heavy), salt/condiment/mustard with silver lid (not found together) and egg cup from the Ritz Carleton Hotel. All from thrift stores or rummage sales.

These mugs personify the quintessential coffee mug that you used to see in the diners years ago and have become an icon in the restaurant ware realm. There are legions of folks who wouldn't drink their joe out of anything else! In my misspent youth I can remember late nights sitting in a booth at the local diner drinking hot strong coffee out of hefty mugs like these and discussing the meaning of life long into the early morning hours . . . sigh . . . those were the good ol' days!

 

Desirable, collectible and getting harder to find in good condition, these mugs have great heft and just a marvelous feel in your hand--they're wonderful to wrap your fingers around for warmth on chilly winter mornings.

A dinosaur plate and restaurantware

 

marked on back

Dinosaur Day Collection

Made in England

Exclusive Design

copyright 84

The Berry's

 

California Handprints tablecloth recently thrifted.

September 2018 color of the month table setting. Fave vintage: speckled melmac plates, melmac cups, squiggle edge napkins, pretty tablecloth, restaurantware plate under flowers from the yard, and an artgoodies organic honey tea towel to complete the look!

Syracuse- 1956 date code. in Explore 2/10/09 #315

Taking photos again when I should be washing these!

 

Now the water is cold and I won't hand wash in cold water. Laundry yes, dirty greasy dishes, NO.

Beautiful five color decalcomania!

 

This pattern and other similar patterns have been revived and are available on a wide variety of gifts and other household items i.e. linens, ceramics, etc. at Googie Heaven.

 

Richard Koppe Biography : www.flickr.com/photos/juggernautco/19360187/sizes/o/

A few of my vintage treasures, the flour sifter was a gift from my husband, I love the colors and the graphics. The hoosier in the background belonged to my Grandmother and was in our kitchen at home.

Can you tell the kitchen is the center of my home?

these banana pancakes are light and fluffy! I'll never make regular pancakes again.

Mash 1 banana in a bowl. Add 1 cup milk, 1 tsp vanilla extract, 1 egg, and 1 tsp canola oil and mix with a fork.

 

In another bowl sift 1 cup flour, 1 tsp salt, 1 tblsp sugar, and 2 tsp baking powder.

 

Add the wet mix into the dry. Heat a griddle to med - high, brush with butter and cook the pancakes on both sides until done. Serve with fresh fruit, powdered sugar and maple syrup. YUM!

DelishyTown.tumblr.com

Daily Inspection for Your Protection

 

My first restaurant ware plate. Syracuse China. Christmas present from friends.

Donuts made with potatoes! In Explore Mar.17-08

Gearing up for my Friday Faves!

 

1. Little Kenmore washer!!!, 2. crystal and china salt shakers, 3. best friends, 4. DSC_5848, 5. Linens for sale, 6. tableware_kitchenware_pict0662, 7. shelf over door with antique ironstone, 8. Kitchen collection, 9. White Dessert Table Setting, 10. Garolini Size 7.5 M, 11. Peg, 12. dried hydrangeas in light fixture, 13. Silver and glass, 14. Chemex Coffee Maker & Son, 15. 1jeannesands, 16. Dreaming of Paris- winter whites, 17. Wanting To Play In The Snow, 18. Silver matchbox, 19. The Ice Wagon - ca 1910, 20. 365/344 Swirl for a gray day, 21. 1aging, 22. matasnow, 23. Sterne, stars, étoiles, 24. LUNCHEON ON RESTAURANT WARE, 25. They are ready!!!!, 26. Imagine peace..., 27. Bubble-ice-ski, 28. Sweet Shoes, 29. Genuine Wilendure, 30. Museum mannequins - Original, 31. Autumnal Dish Display, 32. vintage bling, 33. Weighing in at..., 34. Seasonal sale in Shed, 35. Joshua Tree NM Snow, 36. 096

 

I am unable to make mosaics the way I used to, so I created this one by going into my Favorites, clicking on each photo, copying the URL for it and then pasting it into the Mosaic Maker form.

 

I used to be able to see ALL of my Favorites in a long string of photos in Mosaic Maker and select the ones I wanted to feature. Now, I can only see about 50 of my latest Favorites OR choose a whole Favorites page which may contain blanks that I'd rather not see.

 

It was fun assembling these photos, but very time intensive. Hope anyone who stops by to see this enjoys perusing it as much as I enjoyed making it. ;o)

 

Created with fd's Flickr Toys

TEPCO Factory Exterior - Front - 1955

Built in 1947, this TEPCO factory building, located in El Cerrito, CA, consisted of a brick front-office (shown) and a barrel-vaulted, concrete-reinforced production factory.

 

The factory was built on the same site as the original TEPCO factory, which opened in 1930 and was twice damaged by fire: on June 5, 1937 and on May 22, 1946.

 

After John Pagliero's death in 1968, this factory was demolished in 1970.

   

1950's Jackson China.I love how his body is a cup, head & limbs are donuts.In Explore Mar.17-08

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