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Enamels

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Colonial Williamsburg’s collection of eighteenth-century Chinese and English enamel work ranges from small boxes to showy teawares, including many examples from Abby Aldrich Rockefeller’s collection.

Since ancient times, many cultures have fused powdered glass to metal to create colorful and beautiful enameled objects. Painted enamels were an important innovation of the eighteenth century. Using technologies perfected in the fused silver plate industry and decorative techniques already mastered by china and porcelain painters, painted enamel objects provided consumers with a fashionable alternative to grace their tea, dining, and even dressing tables. Eighteenth-century newspapers and other documents also recount the availability of small personal objects such as enamel snuff and patch boxes, toothpick cases, and smelling or scent bottles.

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Ewer 2014-92
ca. 1755
Box 2018-1
ca. 1825
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Flatware Case with Knives and Forks 1955-71,1-25
ca. 1770-1790
Cassolette 1981-212,1
ca. 1765
Dish 1996.BH.104
ca. 1750
Kettle 1996.BH.105
ca. 1745
Box 1996.BH.107
1910-1930
Dish 1979-139
1740-1750
Kettle 1996.BH.12
ca. 1750