Open Tuesday to Saturday from 10am to 1pm and from 2pm to 7pm
14 avenue Matignon, 75008 Paris
https://toboganantiques.com/
Tel :/
[email protected]
Le prix de vente est indiqué sur les factures. Une fois que le prix de vente a été accepté par le client, ce dernier est tenu de régler la facture selon les conditions fixées avec Tobogan Antiques dans les 7 jours de la conclusions de la vente.
Si le client demande à Tobogan Antiques d’organiser le transport, l’intégralité du règlement de l’emballage et du transport devra être effectué avant tout envoi des marchandises, à l’exclusion des éventuels taxes et droits de douanes qui pourront être facturés à l’arrivée des marchandises à destination.
La marchandise reste la propriété de Tobogan Antiques jusqu’au versement intégral du règlement.
Dans le cas d’un transport assuré par Tobogan Antiques (option sur demande avec cotation préalable) :
Le client devra ouvrir le ou les colis en présence du livreur et vérifier l’état de la marchandise avant de signer le bon de livraison et noter en cas de dommage toutes les réserves.
Le client devra notifier à Tobogan Antiques dans un maximum 48 heures suivant la date et l’heure de livraison les éventuels accidents, photos à l’appui, et en gardant les éléments d’emballage.
Dans le cas contraire, les assureurs pourraient exclure toute couverture.
Elegant Pair of Plates
France
Circa 1880
Porcelain,...
Elegant Pair of Plates
France
Circa 1880
Porcelain, Gilt Bronze
Height : 15 cm (5,9 in.) ; Width : 31 cm (12,2 in.)
A charming pair of porcelain plates mounted in gilt-bronze, resting on three lions legs joined by fruits’ garlands. The plates are inserted in an ornamented gilt-bronze moulding with two foliated handles. A palm leaves’ frieze on dark blue background adorns the marli (the large border of the plate) and the central composition is of natural flowers.
This pair of plates is close to the production of the Sèvres Manufacture.
Biography :
The Sèvres Manufacture of soft-paste porcelain was created about 1738 at Vincennes by bankers and financiers with the aim of making true or “hard-paste” porcelain, like Meissen did. In 1753 Louis XV became a major shareholder and the manufactory was transferred to Sèvres, closer to the Versailles Palace. In 1759, Louis XV bought out the other shareholders and Sèvres became the exclusive property of the France Crown. From then, the manufactory mark was a symmetrically crossed Ls (the royal monogram) together with a date-letter indicating the year. The period from 1756 to 1779 represents the most successful and prosperous years for the factory. Louis XV ordered large services for diplomatic and royal presents. The factory producing with success both soft-paste and hard-paste porcelain also invented in these years the most famous ground colors: the dark blue (bleu lapis) about 1752, the turquoise blue (bleu céleste) in 1753, the apple green in 1756, the famous pink in 1757, and the royal blue in 1763.
In the mid-nineteenth century, under Napoleon III’s reign, the Imperial manufacture had a period of great success. Much influenced by the art of the Middle and Far East, Sèvres implemented new techniques and created the « paste on paste » decors. With the disappearance of the sovereign in 1871, the manufacture of Sèvres lost his natural protector. The French Republic, after few hesitations, decided to keep it active.
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