Rookwood 10" Vase Signed by EDWARD DIERS. Mold #589 by Kataro Shirayamadani 1913
$660.00
82
- Mold number creator: Kataro Shirayamadani
- Mold Number: 589
- Object Type: Vase
- Original/Reproduction: Antique Original
- Style: Arts & Crafts
- Artist: EDWARD G. DIERS
- Brand: Rookwood
- Weight: 1.60 lbs.
- Material: Clay
- Year created: 1913
- Type: Vase
- Color: Indigo, yellow, cream, green, pink
- All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
- Production Style: Art Pottery
- Condition: VERY GOOD++. Antique Rookwood 9-1/2” Vase Signed by EDWARD G. DIERS in 1913. The mold shape, #589, was designed by Kataro Shirayamadani. At the vase’s center are pink magnolia blooms, buds, and leaves against a gradation of color moving from Indigo at the top, to yellow-cream, to pale green, to pale pink at the base. Exquisite piece: No hairlines, cracks, chips, scratches or repairs. Some light crazing. DIMENSIONS: 9-1/2”H x 3-1/2”. Mouth diameter= 2-3/4”. Base diameter= just shy of 2-3/4”. WT= 1.60 lbs. ABOUT THE COMPANY: Cincinnati’s Rookwood Pottery opened its doors in 1880, and continues to be the most celebrated and collected American pottery. By the time Rookwood merged with Tiffany & Company in 1967, the Pottery could not recover from its Great Depression losses, and Rookwood closed its kilns the same year. QUESTIONS? Please send us a message, and we will promptly reply.
- Dimensions: 9-1/2”H x 3-1/2”
Description
The Grand Antique Mall, located in Cincinnati, Ohio, presents an
Antique Rookwood 9-1/2” Vase Signed by EDWARD G. DIERS in 1913
. The mold shape, #589, was designed by Kataro Shirayamadani. At the vase’s center are pink magnolia blooms, buds, and leaves against a gradation of color moving from Indigo at the top, to yellow-cream, to pale green, to pale pink at the base. Exquisite piece: No hairlines, cracks, chips, scratches or repairs. Some light crazing.
DIMENSIONS:
9-1/2”H x 3-1/2”. Mouth diameter= 2-3/4”. Base diameter= just shy of 2-3/4”. WT= 1.60 lbs.
ABOUT THE COMPANY:
Cincinnati’s Rookwood Pottery opened its doors in 1880, and continues to be the most celebrated and collected American pottery. By the time Rookwood merged with Tiffany & Company in 1967, the Pottery could not recover from its Great Depression losses, and Rookwood closed its kilns the same year.
QUESTIONS?
Please send us a message, and we will promptly reply.