Many times, coffee and tea is what keeps you going – or makes you relax. This coffee/tea maker serves your favorite beverages around the clock and in all seasons. Hot and freshly made as it should be!
The Barisieur is an alarm clock that will wake you up with a bespoke cup of coffee right when you need it most. It challenges all 5 senses, easing the user into
It’s 5-O’Clock Somewhere: Minted Bourbon Sun Tea More than any other beverage, tea tends to be served up with a ritual. From… > It’s 5-O’Clock Somewhere: Minted Bourbon Sun Tea More than any other b
Explore Your Crochet's free patterns blog and discover inspiring ideas to ignite your creativity. Read our post, 'A Perfect Tea-Time, Free Crochet Patterns'.
A group of 8 International Doris sterling silver 5-3/8" 5 o'clock teaspoons. This pattern was introduced in 1907 and these spoons weigh 173.0 grams in total. oclock teaspoons have a slightly smaller bowl and handle which made them a better choice for serving tea. They are in excellent condition with no monograms, dents, bends, corrosion, damage or repairs. Sterling flatware will have signs of use as expected. Expedited parcel to the U.S. starts at $22.00 and expedited parcel within Canada starts at $17.00 (tracking and loss insurance is included). At this time, we are required to choose a single postal rate, which may not be applicable to your location, or if you require a more expensive option. If your quote is significantly different, we will send you an invoice for the remainder or refund the difference if above our applicable rate to you. A telephone number from the buyer is required immediately for the shipment. We accept Etsy Payments. Items are sent 1-2 days after cleared payment. Our prices are in US. Rates in Canada may vary by distance, and there is usually more than one option. We are happy to send items together to save whenever possible, and if our rate remains the same, so does yours. We pack well. Applicable tax will be added to purchases. Please see our policies for further details. Items are held at the post office for secure delivery. Please check at your post office if parcel doesn't arrive when expected. Items not picked up and returned to us for any reason will have deductions for expenses, shipping & restocking. Please ask any questions prior to purchase as sales are final. Our Etsy shop: http://www.etsy.com/shop/FionaKennyAntiques © Fiona Kenny and www.fionakennyantiques.com
This is a lovely English vintage dining ware: Clock face tea caddy spoon from Chester. Handle part is shape of teapot and spoon bowl part is clock pointing 5 o'clock. (5:00pm for teatime!) Condition: There are some age marks but these age marks make vintage atmosphere. The spoon is in good vintage condition and useful as a loose tea serving spoon. Main Material: Metal Length: 8.5 cm Diameter of the Clock Part: 4.5 cm Price of the item The price of the item is estimated with various reference materials. We consider age marks, scratches, exfoliations, and crazing glazes, when we estimate item. The item is refundable. We will pay back all the money immediately in the case you are not satisfied with the item. If you have some questions about the item, please feel free to contact us!! We will reply back to you as soon as possible!
Plate measures roughly 5.75" in diameter x 1.25" deep, and is in excellent condition, except for shallow 1/2" Chip out of the outermost cusp (most Clearly seen at 12 o'clock position in the first photo). Sold as pictured. Copied from the web: The name Gaudy Welsh entered the pottery collectors vocabulary and the antique world when Professor Howard Williams mentioned it in his 1978 publication. He also standardised many of the names ascribed to patterns we now associate with Gaudy Welsh Pottery. Gaudy Welsh, a name which describes perfectly the hand-painted decoration applied primarily to tea sets, bowls and jugs, Made in both England and Wales between 1820 and 1860, the earthenware, creamware, ironstone and bone china is decorated in charming patterns picked out in underglaze cobalt blue, often in panels, rust or burnt orange and copper lustre, while floral decoration often included pink lustre, green and yellow, all on a white background.It appealed to people of modest incomes in both Britain and the United States, and even today connoisseur collectors are dismissive of Gaudy Welsh. It’s not as posh as the porcelain from Meissen, Chelsea or Worcester or any of the wondrous products of Japan or China, although that is undoubtedly where it has its roots. Gaudy Welsh china is pretending to be something it is not and never will be. It was produced for working class families and a piece cost only a few pennies. It had aspirations, though, like the people who bought it. The name for the distinctive ware appears to have been coined by American collectors. Their Welsh counterparts know it by more prosaic names such as Welsh lustre, peasant enamel, cottage Swansea or simply cottage ware. Fact is, more Americans than Brits collect the stuff, perhaps because it was exported in huge quantities to that country. The result was a burgeoning middle class which could afford the finer things in life and a working class that couldn’t but was striving to make it so. A home decorated with cheap and cheerful china ornaments was tangible proof that a family’s move from country farmhouse to industrial slum was a wise one. Welsh manufactories that produced Gaudy Welsh were responsible for less than a quarter of total production. They include the Cambrian Pottery in Swansea; the South Wales Pottery in Llanelly and the Glamorgan Pottery, also near Swansea. Staffordshire potters were quick to spot the potential market of Gaudy Welsh and were soon producing versions of their own having pirated designs from their Welsh cousins.
Art.com | We Are Art We exist so you can have the art you love. Art.com gives you easy access to incredible art images and top-notch craftsmanship. High-Quality Framed Art Prints Our high-end framed wall art is printed on premium paper using non-toxic, archival inks that protect against UV light to resist fading. Experience unmatched quality and style as you choose from a wide range of designs to enhance your room décor. Professionally Crafted Framed Wall Art Attention to detail is at the heart of our process, as we exclusively use 100% solid wood frames that include 4-ply white core matboard and durable, frame-grade clear acrylic for clarity, long-lasting protection of the artwork and unrivaled quality. With a thoughtfully selected frame and mat combination, this piece is designed to complement your art and create a visually appealing display. Easy-to-Hang & Ready-to-Display Artwork Each framed art piece comes with hanging hardware affixed to the back of the frame, allowing for easy and convenient installation. Ready to display right out of the box. Handcrafted in the USA. Figurative Art Think reality delights? You bet your walls do too. So, why not introduce them to our collection of figurative art. Make acquaintance with inspiring muses of famous masters or get a glimpse of pop culture icons caught on camera. Any masterpieces you choose will give your space a unique story to share in our handcrafted frames. This genre of art involves a realistic depiction of living as well as inanimate objects. Artists like Jean Michel Basquiat, Norman Rockwell, and Banksy are renowned for giving a platform to cultural commentary and human experiences through their art. The Print This art print displays sharp, vivid images with a high degree of color accuracy. A member of the versatile family of art prints, this high-quality reproduction represents the best of both worlds: quality and affordability. Art prints are created using a digital or offset lithography press. Paper Type: Art Print Finished Size: 9" x 12" Arrives by Thu, Jun 27 Product ID: 55634187414A
OttomanShopDesign presents the authentic Moroccan Tea Set in modern shape and different colors. Besides the fact that our products are made by specialists from the old school, our manufacturing process is completely different from the mass products available in the market, and you cannot find this product in another store, we are the only ones who bring you amazing Moroccan teacups. Our Handmade 💖Designer Poufs💖 have taken the world of HIGH-END INTERIOR DESIGN by storm, and we can totally see why! Besides the fact that our products are made by the Old School Professionals, our manufacturing process is very different from the mass produce poufs available on the market. We don't use modern machinery, instead, all our products are handcrafted in the same manner as it used to be for centuries while decorating the Royal Palaces of Arabian monarchs. Magic with our impressive range of elegant Moroccan Tea Set. OttomanShopDesign glassware is practical and versatile for drinking, candle holders, or sophisticated party favors. Each cup of Moroccan tea is hand-painted by skilled artisans in Morocco. Our Moroccan Tea Set includes this wonderful and regal set of 6 teacups. Every glass is a piece of art. Serve tea in elegance with this beautiful set. It can be used as wine glasses or a votive candle holder for a different look. The most important thing about making Moroccan mint tea is having the right teapot. Of course, you can get away with letting the ingredients infuse in water like with most tea infusions. But to get that special taste everyone craves in Moroccan mint tea, you will need a special Moroccan teapot. Our collection countain this Exquisite and royal set of 6 tea glasses. Each glass is a piece of art. Serve your tea in style with this beautiful set. Can be used as wine glasses or votive candle holder for a different look. Glasses dimensions: 4"tall x 2.5" diameter This set includes: - a Big teapot - a round tray - six tea glasses Please note, that our products are handmade so they might slightly differ each from another in ornament or shade of color. Beautifully Handmade. Reviews: We would really appreciate if you take some of your time and give us perhaps 5 stars positive Feedback once you receive you order and are fully satisfied with it. My business depends on your Feedback. We will leave you the same positive feedback after getting your payment. Shipping: This item will be shipped within 5 days after receiving your payment. We ship with UPS EXPRESS; you will get your item in less than 5 days (most of the time 48 hours). Items can be shipped from our warehouse in Morocco marrakech. UPS requires a contact phone number, so please leave a note when you purchase with your phone number. Return Policy: After receiving the package within 14 days, if you feel that you are unsatisfied or there are some problems with it, we will be glad to exchange it or give you refund once we receive the returned one. We aren't responsible for the shipping cost and we don't refund what we paid for shipping even if the item was listed as free shipping. International Buyers – Please Note: Import duties, taxes, and charges are not included in the item price or shipping cost. These charges are the buyer's responsibility. Please check with your country's customs office to determine what these additional costs will be prior to bidding or buying. Wholesale deals: Since we make and export poufs all over the world, we offer the best prices on the net. No one can beat our prices because we export to so many of them. If you are interested to purchase on wholesale basis, just contact us and we will be happy to deal with you. We can also make the design in our workshop according to your needs.
You can recreate the McDonald's Sweet tea at home.
International Sterling Silver Eighteen Ten 1810 Flatware Set Service 61 Pieces 2488 Grams. 8 Forks, 7 1/4" 8 Salad Forks, 6 1/4" 8 Knives, 9 1/8" 8 Teaspoons 5 O'Clock, 6 1/8" 8 Cream Soup Spoons, 6 1/8" 8 Demitasse Spoon, 4 1/8" 7 Butter Knife, 6" 2 Serving Spoons, 7 7/8" 1 Iced Tea Spoon, 7 1/4" 1 Sugar Spoon, 5 5/8" 1 Gravy Ladle 6 3/8" 1 Sauce Ladle, 5 1/2" Great pre-owned condition. Item is being sold as found. Some patina and light scratches. Overall fantastic appearance!!!
Vintage cake stand or stands or fruit bowls in transparent glass. Most likely this object was made with the pressed glass technique. It is said that it was the Duchess of Bedford, Maria Stanhope Russell (1783-1857), who introduced the use of stands to serve sandwiches and desserts during five o'clock tea. Beautiful object suitable for setting your table with fruit, desserts, especially during an "afternoon tea", or to be used as a centerpiece decorated with flowers. Dimensions: diameter —> 22 cm height —> 14.5 cm c. Conditions: very good —> it is a used object, but in very good condition. In backlight you can see a very light black line. The base has some light chips, one of which is a little more evident. Please note that depending on the light and lighting, the colors of the photos may slightly vary from the original object.
Item specificsCondition
If serving these elegant sandwiches for afternoon tea, remove the crusts and cut each into 4 triangles or 2 rectangles. Arrange in stacks of 2 alongside the rest of your tea sandwiches.
While we love the traditional Thanksgiving meal as much as the next gal, our motto is, Why have one celebration when you can have two? The likeminded Gaby Dalkin of What’s Gaby Cooking agrees—in the weeks before Thanksgiving each year, she hosts a lively Friendsgiving dinner, inviting her pals over to eat, drink and enjoy each other’s company. Sounds …
Dried Fruits, Naturally Dried Orange * We collected the delicious oranges of our gardens at the best time of the harvest and dried them without using any additives. We are sure you will like it. It was dried in all its flavor and water. It was very tasty and very enjoyable to eat. You can present the orange slices that we have prepared with this beautiful care to your spouse, friend, and distant family. Besides your coffee, you can serve 5 o'clock tea to your guests with its light flavor. It will go very well as a nice snack. You can add this wonderful aroma to your salads, cakes, desserts, and teas. ***SHIPMENT*** Fast shipping worldwide by FedEx Express!
88 pieces of Oneida Community silverplate flatware in the Coronation pattern, with solid oak box. Original design, 1936. Exact age of this set unknown. 7 piece place setting for 12 + 4 serving pieces. Listing includes: 12 hollow handle dinner knives with stainless steel blades - 9 5/8 inches. 12 dinner forks - 7 5/8 inches. 12 salad forks (no diamond between middle tines) - 6 3/4 inches. 12 round bowl soup spoons - 7 inches. 12 tea spoons - 6 1/8 inches. 12 youth five o'clock spoons - 5 1/4 inches. 12 individual solid handle butter spreader - 6 3/8 inches. 1 pierced pair or pastry server - 10 3/4 inches. 1 sugar spoon - 6 1/8 inches. 1 master butter - 6 7/8 inches. 1 seafood/pickle fork - 6 inches. All pieces are in excellent vintage condition with typical fine scratches from previous use. No bends, no tarnish. Box has a series of rather deep scratches on the top near the front as photo'd. When polished the scratches are barely noticeable - when dry they are noticeable - See last 2 photos. The pattern is beautiful without being overtly ornate; a feature that lends itself to a broad range of dining situations and decorative styles. (SYL) Follow me: IG: @neilsontracie FB: https://www.facebook.com/VintageChicDream Boring but IMPORTANT shipping information: US Shipping overages will be refunded. Shipping to western and central states may be less than quote given - contact me with address for accurate cost. Smaller items may ship First Class - larger items may ship USPS Parcel Select or FedEx Home Delivery. CANADA Shipping overages will be refunded. Shipping to western and central provinces may be less than quote given - contact me with address for accurate cost. OUTSIDE OF NORTH AMERICA Shipping overages will be refunded. Shipping to your country may be less than quote given, contact me with address for accurate cost.
Fragrant and warm straight from the oven, these simple biscuits are simply delicious
Flint, Michigan 1882-1887 The American custom of having afternoon tea is often traced back to the late nineteenth century when the upper classes in New York began to routinely engage in their version of the British ritual. However, well before that date, average women were using the term “five o’clock tea” to describe some of their get-togethers, as shown by nine enigmatic menus from the mid-1880s that recently came to light—a surprising discovery since menus were seldom printed for such events in private homes. These mementos were apparently saved by a woman who belonged to a small circle of friends. Although the menus contained the names of the participants, the use of nicknames and initials made it difficult to determine where the social events had taken place. Nevertheless, through trial and error, it was eventually determined that the women lived in Flint, Michigan, then a town of about 9,000 people. The menus provide a glimpse of the everyday social life of middle-class Midwesterners, while one in particular reveals the American entrepreneurial spirit that would soon set the country’s wheels into motion. The late-afternoon meals were called by variety of names—lunch, coffee, tea, and supper. The earliest menu comes from a “New England Supper” on October 31, 1882, a date identified as Halloween. The theme party reflected an unusual juxtaposition of themes, since the Puritans had been opposed to merry celebrations on the day once known as All-Hallows’ Eve. While attitudes in the United States changed with the influx of Irish and Scottish immigrants who brought a joyful spirit to the holiday, it would not be assimilated into mainstream society until the early twentieth century. Pork and beans, brown bread, and pumpkin pie were foods traditionally associated with the colonial period. They were served at social events across the country during the Centennial Celebration in 1876. In the spring of 1885, the potluck supper at May Joyner’s house was called a “five o’clock tea” even though it included foods like fried chicken and home-made potato chips, then called Saratoga chips. Interestingly, the salad is dressed with Durkee’s, a commercial product made in Queens, New York. The menu below is faintly inscribed with the name of Carrie Rankin who brought the baking powder biscuits to this affair. Her name appears on all of the menus in one form or another, indicating she was probably the one who saved them. At the time of this gathering, she was twenty-nine years old. The late-afternoon meal at Mrs. Flint Smith’s house in October of 1885 is dubbed a “four o’clock lunch.” These menus are printed in the so-called artistic style, featuring the kind of fancy type designs and quirky embellishments then in vogue. Carrie’s husband, Francis H. Rankin, Jr., was a letterpress printer (and publisher of the Wolverine Citizen) who probably made these menus for his wife and her friends. Several menus bear the Roman numeral “XIV,” indicating the social group comprised fourteen women. The “five o’clock tea” in November of 1885 at Miss Minnie Hamilton’s home included cold tongue, oyster sandwiches, and Parker House rolls, named after the luxury hotel in Boston. The menu below is printed on card stock engraved by J. A. Lowell in Boston. Strawberries were in season in May of 1886, when Annie Chase hosted an “afternoon coffee.” Many of these meals included a seasonal lettuce salad. The word “salad” on hotel and restaurant menus often referred to cooked salads, since the highly-perishable lettuce varieties were only locally available in the spring and fall. Loretta Putnam hosted an evening “tea” in July of possibly the same year. It began at 7:30 p.m., most likely to escape the heat of the day. The supper, featuring cold dishes appropriate for the summertime, may have been served al fresco, either on the porch or in the yard. In September of 1886, twelve members of the “XIV” lunched at the Bryant Hotel, an unusual venue for a potluck gathering where everyone brought a homemade dish. On April 27 of the following year, Carrie Rankin hosted a lunch at her home on First Avenue and Lyon Street in central Flint. As it happened, this group of friends and relatives lived within a six-block radius of one another. The menu below comes from the third annual party of the Why Not Club. This social group seemingly comprised Francis Rankin and other men married to the women who belonged to the “XIV.” The dinner dance was held at the Bryant Hotel on Thanksgiving evening in 1885, although the menu contains no reference to the holiday. The unusual notations on the back of this card were inscribed in 1906 when someone (presumably Carrie Rankin) ran a grim tally to determine how many of the “Why Nots” had died over the intervening 20-year period. The word “dead” was written by thirteen of the names. Interestingly, one of the eight men shown to still be alive was W. C. Durant. This was probably William C. Durant, a leading pioneer of the automobile industry. William C. Durant, ca. 1885 In 1885, twenty-four-year-old William “Billy” Durant co-founded the Coldwater Road Cart Company that made horse-drawn carriages. Durant later established other companies, and by the early twentieth century, he was manufacturing automobiles. In 1908, Durant and Frederic L. Smith formed General Motors. After losing control of the company in 1910, Durant partnered with Swiss-born race car driver Louis Chevrolet. Together, they founded Chevrolet which was acquired General Motors in 1915, thereby creating a multi-brand holding company with different lines of cars. Although Durant and rival Henry Ford both foresaw the mass production of automobiles, these entrepreneurs approached the market differently. Ford believed in making one basic model, famously saying “Any customer can have a car painted any color that he wants so long as it is black.” Durant, on the other hand, drew on his experience in the carriage business, producing automobiles for various incomes and tastes. Why not? Note 1. An additional nine menus dating from 1883 to 1887 were discovered in 2016, and in 2020, a menu from 1885 surfaced at auction that confirmed the location as Flint, Michigan.
This Tea Rituals Around the World slideshow at Condé Nast Traveler (condenasttraveler) is a tea-lover’s delight! Never before have I seen tea time look so sumptuous. Click through the slideshow to...