Since the company is now slightly over 250 years old, anything
made from year one to year 150 is now officially considered to
be an antique. Antique certification begins for any item that
can be verified to be at least 100 years old and since the
Wedgwood Company keeps meticulous records on all of its designs,
any piece of Wedgwood can be quickly, easily and accurately
dated.
In addition to meticulous record keeping and files, Josiah
Wedgwood marked all of his designs with a signature to identify
the piece as his and not a copy, and to date it accurately to
the month and year it was produced. Many people have gone to
great lengths to fraudulently copy these marks to make a newer
piece of china look like a piece of antique Wedgwood China for
the obvious financial gain.
With the advent of online auctions, antique Wedgwood China has
become a hot item and the uninformed buyer may think he's
getting a bargain on some antique pieces, when in fact he's
buying newer pieces made to look like they are antiques. There
are collections of antique Wedgwood China worth millions,
depending upon the original owner, the care and maintenance of
the collection and its completeness.
The collection once owned by the Queen of England, meticulously
maintained, passed down through the generations and currently on
display in London, is literally priceless.
The main reason for this huge interest in antique Wedgwood
China, other than the obvious financial one, is that people
desire to have a complete collection and after many years of
less than stellar maintenance, pieces break and have to be
replaced.
About the author:
Wedgewood China
provides detailed information about discontinued, antique, and
discount fine china, plus fine china outlets, values, and
history. Wedgewood China is affiliated with Business Plans by Growthink.
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