VINTAGE
Enamel Currants Caddy
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A vintage 1930s white enamel canister with lid, titled Currants.
Enamel canisters and bins became an Edwardian alternative to the stoneware jar, and the first half of the twentieth century saw their heyday, when enamel kitchenware became all-the-rage. Apart from being much lighter in weight and therefore far easier to use, they survived the rigours of a busy kitchen - for they didn't shatter when dropped. Canisters, caddies and bins that bear the name of their contents - such as Currants, the caddy we offer here - are now much sought after and are still very much relevant today as they were one hundred years ago.
Year of manufacture: circa 1930
Origin: England
Material: enamelware
Diameter 13cm
Height 17cm
Condition: good, with slight pitting to the enamel around the lid's handle. This adds to its character and is typical of enamel vessels of this age.
Note: much "vintage enamel" popular today was, and still is, made in Poland - and some of it is not as old as it would appear. This canister however has a Made in England stamp applied within the enamel to its base and is a genuine early piece.
History of enamel in the home
Up until the mid 19th century kitchen storage vessels were either ceramic or tin. Although the enamelling process had been invented hundreds of years before, it took the Industrial Revolution to drive forward the quality of vitreous enamelling and its application to everyday household objects; and by the end of the 19th Century enamelled kitchen vessels had become commonplace.