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Curious about this punch bowl

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Asian Antiques737 of 10167Japanese Geisha Tea /Sake SetBrass vase from India
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    Posted 3 years ago

    Luvbookie1
    (1 item)

    Asian Japanese punch bowl beautiful details. I bought this at a thrift store, I’m so curious about this as I can’t seem to find any info online. It looks like it has gold leaf details and it’s so interesting to study. Anyone know anything about this? This is a large punch bowl.

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    Comments

    1. vetraio50 vetraio50, 3 years ago
      A pic of thee base would be helpful. I suspect it is modern. But you never know.
    2. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      I just took a photo of the base - there are no markings. It probably is modern - but is there any value in this? How does one know?
    3. IVAN49 IVAN49, 3 years ago
      French and Dutch flags. Very unusual for Far East porcelain unless made for export.
    4. IVAN49 IVAN49, 3 years ago
      Union Jack flag, too.
    5. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      Good points! I did see online some antique place is selling what looks to be the same item at $650
    6. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      Here’s the one I saw online -
      I’ll add it to my photos
    7. IVAN49 IVAN49, 3 years ago
      Professional help needed because those export bowls with flags of western countries are widely reproduced in China and sold as such:
      Description: Reproduction Chinese Export porcelain Hong bowl
      21st century; modeled after legendary original bowl with paintings of foreign trade centers, American ship in interior, 7 in. H., 18 in. Diam.
    8. Gillian, 3 years ago
      A punch bowl is a misnomer isn't it?
    9. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      Ha! I just repeated what I saw online next to a photo of what appears to the be the same item in question.
    10. keramikos, 3 years ago
      Luvbookie1, Beautiful. :-)

      Here's one in the Smithsonian:

      *snip*

      This large Chinese export bowl features a panoramic view of the hongs—the office, warehouse, and living spaces for foreign merchants in Canton, China, in the late 18th century. There European and American merchants traded with their Chinese counterparts for highly desirable teas, silks, and porcelains. The presence of the Stars and Stripes outside the American factory suggests that the bowl was made in or after 1785, following America’s entry into direct trade with China in 1784. (Note that the Chinese artist painted the stars in blue on the white porcelain background, probably for technical reasons rather than in error.) The flags of France, Britain, Spain, Denmark, and Sweden also can be seen outside their respective factories. Punch bowls depicting the hongs were exotic souvenir items, brought back to America by the East Coast entrepreneurs who sailed to China as independent merchants, thereby breaking dependence on the British East India Company to provide the former colonies with tea and other luxury goods.

      The Chinese produced bowls like this in the town of Jingdezhen in southern China specifically for the western market. Undecorated, they were carried five hundred miles overland to Canton, where enamel decoration was applied in workshops close to the hongs. On completion a large bowl like this was packed in a crate with several others and dispatched through the hongs. All goods for export were ferried in the small boats seen painted on this bowl, to the deep-water port of Whampoa farther down the Pearl River.

      A large bowl of this kind would have been used to serve punch. The word “punch” is thought to derive from the Hindu word “pànch,” meaning “five”—for the number of ingredients used to make the brew.The custom of drinking punch reached the West through the East India trade. Punch bowls became indispensable at convivial male gatherings in the clubs, societies, and private homes of the port cities on the American East Coast in the late 18th century.

      *snip*

      https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/search/object/nmah_587576
    11. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      Very nice! Even as a reproduction of the original - it still is very striking and I find myself looking at all the details. It is unusual though, given the time period of when this was produced, that there isn’t more of it online. Besides for that one that is on sale for $650
    12. apostata apostata, 3 years ago
      i don,t trust this
    13. apostata apostata, 3 years ago
      Large Chinese Export Porcelain Famille Rose Punch Bowl /Hunting Scene Designs/Maybe 18th 19th Century see mikelven , this is a real one , his is made around 1780 ( jiaging influence ) value difference is almost 4 figures
    14. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      Incredible!!
    15. apostata apostata, 3 years ago
      the one from mikelven is real, yours is not
    16. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      Amazing, I saw his, so pretty, I wonder if he ever sold his.
    17. Gillian, 3 years ago
      Great research keramikos - thank you for always being so thorough.
    18. apostata apostata, 3 years ago
      strange there is an awfull lot of information about this , place , flags, fluidum . glazing, style , value , etc , and just copie- paste ?
    19. IVAN49 IVAN49, 3 years ago
      Chinese porcelain cannot be judged based on eBay descriptions and images.
      As I said, a reliable expertise is needed.
    20. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      Where can an expert be found?
    21. apostata apostata, 3 years ago
      its cute and leave it to that, don,t hurt yourself
    22. Luvbookie1, 3 years ago
      Hahahaha, noted.

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