Identification

Chinese Famille Jaune Porcelain Hat Stand, Qianlong Mark (20th Century)

Photo reference

2 uploaded photos

Overview

This is a classic Chinese hat stand, a specialized vessel designed to hold the formal headwear of high-ranking officials. It features a vibrant 'Imperial Yellow' ground decorated with scrolling lotus vines in the famille rose enamel palette.

Story

Originally designed to support the heavy, gem-topped formal silk hats of high-ranking Qing dynasty officials, the cylindrical hat stand evolved into a highly popular decorative vessel in the 20th century.

Maker / Origin

Produced in the mid-to-late 20th century in Jingdezhen, China's historic porcelain capital, this piece is a factory-made homage to the classical wares of the Qing dynasty. Jingdezhen, China; Jingdezhen, China

Condition & Value

As a purely decorative object in a saturated market, its value is strictly dependent on flawless structural integrity; drill holes from vintage lamp conversions heavily penalize the price. The porcelain appears to be in very good condition with no visible cracks or significant chips.

Full Research

See what it's actually worth.

Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.

Market Analysis

Valuation for this piece is determined by mark-first identification, which confirms it as a mid-to-late 20th-century factory reproduction. A direct comparable—a pierced famille jaune hat stand from the same era—sold recently for $300 at Auctions at Showplace, firmly establishing the upper auction bound for a single, intact piece. Unsold lots at Heritage (estimated $500-$700) and Eldred's (estimated $250-$350 for a pair) demonstrate a strict price ceiling and thin demand for 20th-century factory wares in the traditional antiques market. Consequently, single examples trade primarily on their immediate aesthetic appeal to 'Grandmillennial' and Chinoiserie interior decorators. Authentic 19th-century imperial yellow hat stands (such as a Daoguang-marked example that achieved £100,000 at Christie's) highlight the massive valuation gap between period originals and 20th-century homages.

Value Drivers

Bright 'famille jaune' (yellow ground) enamelwork, highly sought after in current Chinoiserie interior design trends

Classic cylindrical hat stand form, adaptable as a standalone decorative vessel

Clear, legible apocryphal Qianlong reign mark providing vintage aesthetic appeal

Concerns

High market saturation of 20th-century Jingdezhen factory reproductions caps the auction ceiling

Orphaned status: Hat stands are frequently sold in matched pairs, and single pieces trade at a notable discount

High risk of hidden condition issues, particularly base drill-holes or rim wear from mid-century lamp conversions

Best Venue

A mid-tier online auction house specializing in estate properties (e.g., LiveAuctioneers affiliates like Showplace) or a direct-to-decorator retail platform like Chairish.

Upside Potential

Confirmation of flawless structural condition (absolutely no drill holes, rim chips, or tight hairlines) combined with strategic marketing to interior decorators.

Authenticity Notice

Risk Level: Medium. While low base values deter outright counterfeiting of 20th-century wares, misidentification is the primary risk. The stamped (rather than hand-painted) nature of the mark and the opaque quality of the enamels must be correctly identified to prevent mistakenly appraising it as an 18th-century Imperial antique, which would artificially inflate the estimate from hundreds of dollars to six figures.

The upgraded report is now attached to this item.