Homemaker tableware
Homemaker was a pattern of mass-produced
The pattern was a distinctive black on white featuring illustrations of the latest
Production
Tom Arnold gave Enid Seeney a brief to create a modern all-over pattern suitable for production using the Murray Curvex printing machine.[1][page needed] The first prototype was a single plate displayed on the Ridgway stand at the 1956 Blackpool trade fair where it attracted little interest.[1][page needed] Seeney's original concept was for a high-end porcelain set, with yellow holloware, and had her team create a group of such items, which were displayed in the Ridgway design studio.[1][page needed] This prototype coffee set was then noticed by Ted Smith a buyer from Woolworths who placed an order in 1957 for tea sets to be sold in five London stores.[1][page needed] Seeney left Ridgway soon after and did not know that the range was being sold throughout Britain until she later spotted it for sale in a branch of Woolworths in Plymouth.[3] The Homemaker range was first produced using the Metro shape created by Ridgway design director Tom Arnold[1][page needed] (died 2002) and later on the new Cadenza shape. Homemaker was earthenware, transfer printed with a glaze applied on top, which enabled it to be produced relatively cheaply and to appeal to a mass market. Production of the blank ware was out-sourced to at least one other Staffordshire factory over its life, but pieces were always printed at Ridgway, and marked with one of a range of Ridgway backstamps.[1][page needed] In 1959, the American company Homer-Laughlin made unlicensed copies of the design.[1][page needed]
Collecting
Because Homemaker was produced in very large quantities over a long period of time, few pieces are rare. The range is, however, highly collectable. A few pieces are scarce and have higher values, such as the Bon Bon Dish and the Cadenza Teapot [1][page needed] which may be the rarest item in the range. Items in red on white are also known, and many of the known examples have been sourced in Australia.
References
- ^ OCLC 52144282.
- ^ a b "Designer of iconic pottery tableware dies at 79". The Sentinel. 18 April 2011. Archived from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
- ^ a b c Simon Moss (8 May 2011). "Enid Seeney obituary". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 20 February 2014. Retrieved 20 February 2014. Seeney also designed Samoa and English Garden.
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Further reading
- Moss, Simon. (1997) Homemaker: A 1950s design classic. Moffat: Cameron & Hollis. (2nd revised edition 2002). ISBN 978-0906506219