Featured Turkish Hand Painted Plate

Discussion in 'Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain' started by bosko69, Nov 23, 2022.

  1. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    I actually found something at the local Thrift today.I don't think it's worth too much,but even when I score a pair of socks at the thrift these days I'm ecstatic.
    It's a 12" wide Kuthya hand-painted Turkish plate-can't make out the signature,but I think it's basically a wall hanger anyway,as opposed to a harvey wall banger. Turk1.jpg Turk2.jpg
     
    glassluv, Figtree3, kentworld and 7 others like this.
  2. charlie cheswick

    charlie cheswick Well-Known Member

    I get the feeling you aren't a novice in the field of antiques

    But ya gotta be more positive about finding stuff mate

    It's the same for all of us out there, but the chase isn't over

    I very rarely find stuff in charity shops anymore, but I find antique shops and local auction houses are cheaper than charity shops these days For certain things

    Most people who work in charity shops haven't a clue on the ambiguous things that turn up
     
  3. charlie cheswick

    charlie cheswick Well-Known Member

    Buying on ebay itself is never a bad option either, badly described, photoed items are abundant

    People list things as a buy it now without any realisation of what their items are worth all of the time

    I find better things now than I think I've ever found before, not because of the situation of things, but because I've learned more
     
    Last edited: Nov 23, 2022
    kentworld, Chris Roy, komokwa and 3 others like this.
  4. silverbell

    silverbell Well-Known Member

    Very true! I have also gotten some wonderful (to me, anyway) things because some people don't have a clue what the purpose of their widget is, and so list it as something else. Also mispellings, especially in the early days of eBay...hard to believe how many versions of "tureen" abound. And usage! Fish forks are not the same as dessert forks! Nor is every "hunting dog" a pointer!
     
    komokwa, charlie cheswick and judy like this.
  5. vitry-le-francois

    vitry-le-francois Well-Known Member

    Local auctions are a gold mine for finding old stuff :)
     
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  6. Any Jewelry

    Any Jewelry Well-Known Member

    I used to buy a lot of turquoise from a seller who called it torquis.;) Unfortunately someone corrected him, and with more people bidding, bids became to high for me.:(
     
  7. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Got to expand my search parameters.Yes,the early days of Ebay misspellings were good !
     
  8. komokwa

    komokwa The Truth is out there...!

    lovely plate !!!
     
    Chris Roy likes this.
  9. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    They're quite skilled,prob a trade passed down for decades.Kuthya's an ancient city,surrounded and built on older ones.
     
    kentworld and Chris Roy like this.
  10. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    I don't think the plate is all that ancient, however, but it's pretty.

    I've found the best places to look for deals are often the "worst" on paper. I've scored huge in houses full of new crap and at tag sales that weren't advertised too well. Went to one house full of new stuff, only to see Georgian candlesticks I'd just seen on a UK Youtube channel. Snagged those so fast.... Found a Yurman bracelet in a pile of kiddie crap at a nothing-much sale. A nice 14k bracelet in the kid leftovers pile at a moving/ estate sale. You get the idea.
     
  11. bosko69

    bosko69 Well-Known Member

    Evey-The plates prob 50's or newer.Yep,the more unassuming and banal the listing,the more untouched for the discriminating sharp-eyed picker.
     
  12. henley hanley

    henley hanley New Member

    I have many such Kutahya pieces of Iznik design, mostly modern, all handpainted, none particularly costly, but all beautiful. There are currently dozens of factories around Kutahya cranking these pieces out, plates, vases, bowls, and "fancy" serving plates w/individual dishes for sauces. Rarely signed by the artist, and if so, the name is meaningless, to me at least. When looking, I seek out true Iznik-clay pieces which have a lot of quartz in the clay and are noticeably heavier. While some antique Iznik pieces are seen, in the 1990s, a Turkish university "discovered" , rather was able to formulate, the long-lost formula for Iznik quartz clay and now there are pieces made of such but are typically expensive. Presuming good condition, this is a nice plate at your presumed cost.
     
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  13. architrave

    architrave Well-Known Member

  14. kentworld

    kentworld Well-Known Member

  15. Figtree3

    Figtree3 What would you do if you weren't afraid?

    @bosko69 , in case you didn't see that this discussion has been revived.
     
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