The Piece
A softly geometric Art Deco ironstone bowl crafted by Myott, Son & Co. in Staffordshire, England between 1925 and 1940. The form is immediately striking: a faceted lower body rising into a smooth, flared rim, all capped with thin hand-painted banding that defines its silhouette with quiet precision. At first glance, it reads as a simple utility bowl—but its shape reveals that unmistakable Deco ambition: clean angles, warm cream glaze, and a deliberate play of light over each panel.
The glaze has mellowed beautifully over the decades, settling into a warm ivory tone with faint age speckling and softly worn gold trim along the lip. It feels like something lifted from a 1930s English kitchen—sunlight on tiled walls, copper pots hanging overhead, and the steady rhythm of everyday life unfolding around functional pottery made with style.
Design & Construction
→ Form & Style
The bowl features a twelve-panel faceted base, a hallmark of early Art Deco ceramics where geometry began to replace ornate Victorian curves. The upper wall flares gently, creating a balanced contrast between angularity and softness. Thin banding—one in pale buttercream, one in black—breaks the form visually, adding structure and movement.
This is utilitarian Deco: elegant in silhouette, understated in palette, confident in its geometry.
→ Materials
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English ironstone / semi-porcelain clay body
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warm ivory and buttercream glaze
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thin black banding
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worn gold trim around the rim
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early Myott crown backstamp (“Myott, Son & Co. England”)
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slight surface wear consistent with 80–100 years of age
Its weight is solid and grounded, typical of British ceramic production in the interwar years—built for function yet designed with an eye for form.
→ Functionality
Originally made as a table or kitchen bowl—for mixing, serving, or holding small sides—today it functions beautifully as:
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a styling bowl for entry tables or shelves
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a fruit or decorative object bowl
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a vanity catchall
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a sculptural standalone piece in a moody interior
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part of a curated English Deco kitchen display
Its faceted form gives it strong sculptural presence even when empty.
History & Provenance
Myott, Son & Co. was founded in 1898 and became one of the most recognizable Staffordshire potteries during the Art Deco period. The 1920s–40s were their golden years, producing bold geometric shapes, hand-painted banding, and colorful, modern patterns that made them favorites in both Britain and export markets.
This bowl’s crown backstamp is a pre-WWII mark used before the company reorganized post-war and before later stamps adopted “Made in England.” The faceted style aligns with the surge of Deco influence across British ceramics during the interwar period—shape-driven, practical, modern.
Pieces from this era are collected today for their clean geometry, soft palettes, and genuine period architecture.
Condition
Beautiful vintage condition with:
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light surface wear
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minor age speckling
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faint glaze discoloration
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small rubs to gold rim
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stable and sound structure
The wear is soft and period-appropriate, enhancing its authenticity and charm.
Product Details
| Attribute | Description |
|---|---|
| Item | Art Deco Ironstone Bowl |
| Maker | Myott, Son & Co. |
| Era | 1925–1940 |
| Origin | Staffordshire, England |
| Material | Ironstone / semi-porcelain |
| Condition | Minimal wear, stable, light rim fade |
| Use | Kitchen, décor, display, styling |
| Dimensions | (To be measured) |
| Style | British Art Deco utilitarian ware |
Why It Belongs in Your Home
This bowl brings the warmth and geometry of interwar British design into a modern space. The faceted body, soft glaze, and hand-painted banding give it sculptural clarity without overwhelming the eye. It feels grounded, intentional, and quietly beautiful.
On a shelf, it reads like a ceramic artifact; on a table, it becomes a functional piece with history and soul. Perfect for moody interiors, English countryside aesthetics, or any space that values form, age, and authenticity.