Royal Winton
Royal Winton has been making fine earthenware in Stoke-on-Trent since 1885, but it was in the 1930s that the pottery achieved something genuinely extraordinary: the all-over chintz pattern. Inspired by the printed cotton fabrics that were fashionable in interwar England, Royal Winton developed a transfer printing technique that covered every surface of a piece — handle, spout, lid, and all — in a dense, jewel-like floral repeat. Nothing quite like it had been done before in ceramics, and nothing has quite matched it since.
The patterns have names that read like a garden in full bloom — Royalty, Summertime, Sweet Pea, Welbeck, Hazel — each one a distinct colourway and floral combination, each one collectible in its own right. Royal Winton chintz became enormously popular in Britain, Australia, and North America, and today it is among the most actively collected categories of British ceramics in the world.
Browse our current Royal Winton pieces below — and if you are looking for a specific pattern, get in touch.

The Timeless Edit
Royal Winton Grimwades 'Rosebud' Teapot | Vintage English Earthenware, c.1930s–40s

The Timeless Edit
Royal Winton Grimwades 'Petunia' Oval Serving Tray — Pink Ground, Made in England, 1951–52

The Timeless Edit











