c. 1920s Wedgwood Trentham Double-Handled Cup

Viridian Eclection

$26.60
Era Dishware
Material See description
Condition Excellent Vintage
Provenance Documented
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Condition Rating
As Found Good Very Good Excellent Museum

The Piece A vintage Wedgwood Trentham double-handled cup, dating to the 1920s, featuring a ribbed cream body, pedestal foot, double side handles, geometric border detailing, and a small fl...

Condition Excellent Vintage
Dimensions
Era Dishware
Availability One of a Kind — 1 Available

The Design

The Piece

A vintage Wedgwood Trentham double-handled cup, dating to the 1920s, featuring a ribbed cream body, pedestal foot, double side handles, geometric border detailing, and a small floral urn motif at the center of the bowl.

The underside is marked Wedgwood Etruria England with U.S.A. Patent Aug. 1, 1922, which gives the piece a strong early 20th-century date reference. The form was likely used as a bouillon cup, cream soup cup, or fruit cup, depending on the table setting. Because apparently soup once required dedicated architecture, two handles, and a patent date.

The design is delicate but graphic: a soft ivory ground, thin green rim line, black-red-white border detailing, ribbed exterior texture, and a colorful central floral urn motif. It has that early 1920s English tableware charm that feels useful, collectible, and quietly decorative.

Historical Context

Wedgwood is one of England’s most recognized ceramic houses, founded in the 18th century and known for its long history of refined tableware, jasperware, creamware, and decorative ceramics.

This piece comes from the Trentham pattern, produced during the early 20th century. The mark referencing Etruria, England connects it to Wedgwood’s historic Staffordshire production, while the U.S. patent date of August 1, 1922 places the form or design into the post-World War I period.

The 1920s were a transitional moment in tableware design. Traditional English forms remained popular, but borders and decorative details became slightly more graphic, more linear, and more compact. This cup reflects that shift: still proper, still refined, but with a tighter geometric border that feels more modern than late Victorian ornament.

Product Details

Attribute Details
Item Double-handled cup / bouillon cup / fruit cup
Maker Wedgwood
Pattern Trentham
Estimated Date c. 1920s
Patent Mark U.S.A. Patent Aug. 1, 1922
Origin Etruria, England
Material Glazed earthenware or china
Color Palette Cream, green, black, red, yellow, pink, soft purple
Form Shallow bowl with pedestal foot and two handles
Decoration Floral urn center motif, geometric rim band, ribbed exterior body
Markings Wedgwood Etruria England, U.S.A. Patent Aug. 1, 1922
Condition Vintage condition with visible age wear, border wear, staining, surface marks, and patina
Suggested Use China cabinet display, shelf styling, small catchall, tabletop accent, collector replacement piece
Location Reno, NV Antiques

Condition

This piece is in vintage condition with age-related wear throughout. The exterior border shows visible wear and losses, including an area of surface disruption and discoloration along the rim band. There is light staining, speckling, and surface wear consistent with age and prior use.

The underside shows expected foot-rim wear and discoloration. No major structural break is immediately visible from the photos, but the piece should be considered decorative or light-use due to age and condition.

This is best suited as a display piece, shelf accent, small catchall, or collector’s single replacement, rather than a pristine table-service piece.

Why It Belongs In Your Home

This small Wedgwood cup has all the qualities that make antique tableware worth collecting: a known maker, a clear mark, a defined pattern, visible age, and a charming form that still feels useful.

Style it in a china cabinet, on a bookshelf, beside old books, or on a writing desk as a catchall for rings, clips, or tiny objects that humans insist on losing daily. The double-handled shape gives it more visual interest than a standard teacup, while the floral urn motif and ribbed body add enough detail to stand on its own.

It is not perfect, but that is part of its appeal. This is a piece with age, evidence of use, and a proper Wedgwood mark, which already gives it more credibility than half the “vintage-inspired” tableware currently pretending to have a past


Why It Endures

Surviving examples in this condition are increasingly scarce. Each piece in the Eclection is chosen not just for its age, but for the quality of its making — the craftsmanship that allowed it to endure decades of use and still arrive here, intact and beautiful.

"A collectible heirloom with enduring value — crafted in an era when furniture was designed not just to serve, but to inspire."

This is not decoration. It is history made liveable.

7 Photos Full condition documentation
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