A rare early English silver sugar bowl of octagonal form. Lovely plain style and heavy gauge silver. Good colour.
Weight 132 grams, 4.2 troy ounces.
Height 5.5 cms. Diameter 10 cms.
London 1726.
Maker William Darker.
Literature: Early sugar bowls, like the small size teapot, were of small capacity due to the rarity of tea. Small circular bowls from the late 17th century can occasionally be found, these were probably tea bowls originally but by 1710 the sugar bowl started to appear, often with a cover; these were usually round however octagonal examples are very rare and extremely desirable. Around 1730 larger bowls were introduced, possibly for slops and by the 1760s the swing handled sugar or sweetmeat baskets were available.
Biography
William Darker
William Darker, also known as William Darkeratt. Marks registered 1726 and 1732. Specialist hollowware maker – tankards, coffee pots, beakers, small jugs, sugar bowls. Died 1734.
Condition
Very good. No damage. Excellent patina. Good definition on the corners. Marked underneath with a full and clear set of English hallmarks.
A rare early English silver sugar bowl of octagonal form. Lovely plain style and heavy gauge silver. Good colour.
Weight 132 grams, 4.2 troy ounces.
Height 5.5 cms. Diameter 10 cms.
London 1726.
Maker William Darker.
Literature: Early sugar bowls, like the small size teapot, were of small capacity due to the rarity of tea. Small circular bowls from the late 17th century can occasionally be found, these were probably tea bowls originally but by 1710 the sugar bowl started to appear, often with a cover; these were usually round however octagonal examples are very rare and extremely desirable. Around 1730 larger bowls were introduced, possibly for slops and by the 1760s the swing handled sugar or sweetmeat baskets were available.
William Darker, also known as William Darkeratt. Marks registered 1726 and 1732. Specialist hollowware maker – tankards, coffee pots, beakers, small jugs, sugar bowls. Died 1734.
Express courier service. Delivered to the address provided at the time of purchase. No P.O addresses.
Signature required on delivery.
Please note that certain countries levy import duties and local taxes. Payment of these is the purchaser’s responsibility once the package has reached the destination country and a customs representative will contact you for payment prior to delivery.
Import restrictions. Certain destinations, including the US, ban the import of products containing materials such as ivory and tortoiseshell. We cannot accept orders requiring shipment of such items to those destinations.
We dispatch 1-3 days after receiving cleared payment. Please notify us immediately if you require a special arrangement.
“waxantiques” is a family business run by husband and wife team Lou and Ann Wax.
Our shared interest in antiques led us to change career and start dealing in general antiques shortly after we married. We spent many happy years selling at the world famous Bermondsey antiques market and at the larger UK fairs. As the years progressed our interest became more focused on antique silverware and its domestic history and twenty five years ago we moved on to Camden Passage to open our specialist silver store “waxantiques”.
In 2018 we finally made our move to the London Silver Vaults.
Our website www.waxantiques.com launched in 2011 now accounts for a substantial and growing proportion of the business to the extent where Ann needs to concentrate on maintaining our online presence, while Lou is responsible for the day to day running of the shop and customer liaison.
We are fortunate indeed to have a career which allows us to handle such lovely items, many of which would not be out of place in a museum environment. Perhaps best of all is that it keeps us in contact with customers from all over the world, many of whom we count as good friends as well as colleagues.