Overview
Identification is highly confident based on the clear, legible factory marks. The green underglaze 'Haviland France' mark indicates the porcelain blank was manufactured between 1893 and 1930. The red overglaze 'Haviland & Co.
Identification
Photo reference
3 uploaded photos
Overview
Identification is highly confident based on the clear, legible factory marks. The green underglaze 'Haviland France' mark indicates the porcelain blank was manufactured between 1893 and 1930. The red overglaze 'Haviland & Co.
Story
Manufactured by Haviland & Co. in Limoges, France, between 1893 and 1930. The presence of both the green underglaze factory mark and the red overglaze decorator mark confirms this porcelain was produced and painted entirely at the Haviland facility, representing the high standard of quality demanded during the peak of American imports of fine French porcelain. The secondary market for Gilded Age Limoges porcelain is highly fragmented but active.
Maker / Origin
Haviland & Co.
Condition & Value
Visually, the pieces appear to be in good antique condition with bright enamel colors and intact gilding along the scalloped edges. The current valuation assumes there are no hidden chips, hairline cracks, or significant wear to the gold rims, pending physical confirmation.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
The secondary market for Gilded Age Limoges porcelain is highly fragmented but active. While massive, complete dinner services often struggle to find buyers due to shipping costs and changing dining habits, small sets and individual serving pieces like bone dishes and berry bowls remain popular. They are primarily traded on online marketplaces to collectors looking for replacement pieces or those building eclectic, mix-and-match table settings. Pink rose patterns remain among the most liquid decors.
▲ Clear, double-marked Haviland bases confirm authenticity and factory decoration.
▲ Delicate pink rose garland motifs are consistently desirable among Limoges collectors.
▲ Hand-painted gold-gilded scalloped rims elevate the decorative appeal above plain-edge blanks.
▼ Unverified condition — any hidden chips, hairlines, or gold wear would drop the estimate significantly.
▼ Missing Schleiger pattern number — without an exact pattern match, the set is priced as a generic Haviland rose motif rather than a specific sought-after line.
Best Venue
List as a bundled 3-piece set on a broad online marketplace like eBay or Etsy. Selling these three pieces together is the most efficient strategy, as it creates an attractive small lot for collectors while minimizing the per-item shipping costs and seller fees that would heavily impact profits if they were sold individually.
Upside Potential
If the specific pattern is identified as a highly sought-after rare Schleiger number, or if a buyer is actively seeking these exact replacement pieces to complete a family heirloom set, the lot could reach the $100-$120 range.
Also found — market-range context
Surfaced during research but not used to anchor the valuation — wrong form, species, era, or no published price. Shown so the market range around this item is visible.