Use a loupe to identify a piece of French Limoges.
Many treasure hunters regularly visit antique stores, flea markets, garage sales and auctions trying to find a collectible that is not only beautiful, but also authentic. Many porcelain pieces are labeled as "Limoges" or "French Limoges." Real French Limoges is a porcelain item manufactured in Limoges, France. When determining if the trinket you have your eye on is really a treasure, you can authenticate that it was manufactured in Limoges and determine the time frame in which it was made by checking the mark on the bottom or back of the piece.
Instructions
1. Turn over your piece and check for an impressed "AE" mark. This porcelain is among the oldest French Limoges made. This mark was used by the Allund factory from 1797 to 1868. In 1868, the company that manufactured these pieces changed ownership and the mark was changed. Between the years 1868 and 1898, three different marks were used by this manufacturer: "CH Field Haviland, Limoges," "CHF" and "CHF/GDM." Several factories owned by the Haviland family began to produce Limoges porcelain and many different marks were used after 1898. During this time the company's marks were "GDA," "H & CO/L," "Haviland & Co. Limoges," "H & CO/Depose," "Theodore Haviland, Limoges, France" and "Porcelaine."
2. Look for a mark in red or green. The Bawo & Dotter company of New York established a manufacturing facility in Limoges, France, called Elite Works. That factory began producing porcelain in 1892 with the mark "Elite France" and later "Elite Works France." Some Elite Works collectibles can be dated by the color of the mark. Between 1900 and 1914 the company marked items in red and between 1920 and 1932 the company used green to mark the pieces it manufactured.
3. Learn company names that did not include "Limoges" as part of their marks. There were smaller factories that marked porcelain produced in Limoges simply with the company name. Among these are M. Redon (1853), A. Lanternier (1885), and C. Ahrenfeldt (1886). C. Ahrenfeldt also occasionally used the mark "France C.A. Depose."
4. Examine symbol marks with a magnifying glass. Some Limoges manufacturers incorporated pictures into their marks. Martin Freres and Brothers used a bird with a ribbons in its mouth, one of which read "France." R. Laporte's mark was of a butterfly above the letters "RL/L." One very simple mark was used by the Latrille Freres factory that was set up in an former abbey; it is a simple star surrounded by the words "Limoges France." Printing within these symbols can be difficult to read.
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