The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Collectors’ corner

- by Norman Watson

An unusually shaped King George 11 pewter teapot from around 1730 is testimony to luxury in days gone by.

Illustrate­d is a teapot of a type new to me.

It is a c1730 George II teapot made not of silver or silver-plate, but of pewter.

If the material is unusual for a teapot, what lifts it beyond the ordinary is its “bullet” shape. To explain, the bullet-shaped teapot is almost exclusivel­y a preserve of the Scottish provincial silversmit­h of the 1700s, the name deriving from a shape which echoed that of the spherical musket balls of the period.

They were formed by hammering flat sheets of silver – and they are rare pieces. Tea at this time was exclusive to the upper echelons of society. It was a luxury beyond the reach of most of the citizenry.

Looking back over my records, a c1750 silver bullet-shaped example by George Cooper of Aberdeen sold for £7,000 as long ago as 2001. Several fabulous examples are displayed in top museums, including a rare provincial silver bullet teapot by Alexander Johnson at The McManus.

The example shown appeared at Bonham’s Oxford a week or two back. Of typical diminutive size, with a narrow, tapering spout and a hinged, domed lid, the teapot protected its user with the insulation of a fruitwood scroll handle.

It was marked on the base with a crowned X and an unidentifi­ed initialled maker’s touchmark of T. B.

Teapots in any base metal are rare

– the properties of silver cause heat to be retained, so it was the choice of manufactur­ers. This example was once part of the celebrated A. T. (Bertie) Isher collection of pewter, which was sold at auction in 1976. Back then it made £620.

This time it took £890 against hopes of £400 to £600.

Picture: pewter teapot, £890 (Bonham’s, Oxford).

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