A beautiful lsubstantial 1930's ironstone bowl with generous scale, a soft, time-earned patina and presence. Rare to find a big bowl like this, I fell in love with it the moment I saw it. It’s the kind of piece that is gorgeous - simple, honest, and full of history. Large enough to feel useful every day, yet beautiful enough to sit on your table or kitchen island as it is. Homer Laughlin Potteries began producing pottery in the 1870's, this huge bowl was made by Home Laughlin in May, 1934, at the Newell Potteries, West Virginia.
There is an easy strength to its form—simple, functional, and made for daily use in the American kitchen of the early 20th century. It carries that honest, utilitarian character that makes ironstone so enduring and so appealing today. Placed on your dining table or kitchen island, it becomes a natural focal point. Its presence is quiet but strong, shaped by decades of real use. There is patina, this bowl is practically 100 years old.
Early 20th-century American ironstone was made for real daily use, which is exactly why surviving examples like this remain so appealing today. The best pieces are those that kept their surface honesty—soft wear, gentle patina, and a sense of long usefulness rather than perfection. Bowls of this scale from the 1930's are increasingly hard to source, especially in this simple, unadorned form.
| Brand | frenchgardenhouse |
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