The Timeless Edit

Royal Worcester 'Evesham Gold' Oval Serving Platter 32.5cm — Made in England

$95

An oval serving platter is one of those pieces that earns its place on the table every time it appears. It is the format that carries a roast, anchors a cheese board, or presents a pavlova with the kind of quiet authority that a round plate simply cannot match. Royal Worcester understood this when they brought Evesham Gold to the oval platter format — a piece designed not just to be beautiful, but to be genuinely useful, straight from the oven to the centre of the table.

This 32.5cm oval platter is one of the most versatile pieces in the Evesham Gold range. The autumnal palette of peaches, cherries, and blackberries against a warm cream ground is rendered with the painterly naturalism that made the pattern a household name from the 1960s onwards, and the 22-carat gold rim banding on this piece is in perfect condition — completely intact, bright, and without a trace of the fading or rubbing that so commonly affects vintage gilded pieces. A considered addition to a collected Evesham Gold set, or a handsome standalone piece for someone who appreciates the enduring appeal of genuinely well-made British porcelain.

Details

  • Maker: Royal Worcester, England
  • Pattern: Evesham Gold
  • Item Type: Oval Serving Platter / Meat Dish
  • Introduced: 1961
  • Dimensions: 32.5cm × 28cm
  • Weight: 1.250kg
  • Material: Fine Porcelain
  • Country of Origin: England (GB)
  • Backstamp: Black — Royal Worcester crown, Evesham Gold, Fine Porcelain, Oven to Tableware, 1961

Condition

Excellent vintage condition. Minimal surface wear consistent with careful use. No chips, cracks, crazing, or repairs. No utensil marks or surface scratches. The 22-carat gold rim banding is completely intact and vibrant with no fading or rubbing.

Please review all photos carefully as they form part of the condition description.

Care

Hand wash only in warm water with a mild detergent and a soft cloth or sponge. Do not use abrasive scrubbers. Not suitable for dishwasher or microwave — the gold gilding will not survive either. Oven safe; always allow the platter to cool naturally before washing or placing on a cold surface to avoid thermal shock.

Every piece is carefully wrapped and packaged to ensure it arrives at your doorstep in perfect condition.

Age of an Item

Antique: An item that is at least 100 years old.

Vintage: An item that is at least 20 years old but less than 100 years old and is representative of its era.

Retro: A newer item designed in the style of a past era. It is not from that era but is a modern homage to it.

Condition of an Item

Mint: As new, with no signs of wear.

Excellent Vintage Condition (EVC): Shows minimal signs of wear through use but is not perfect.

Very Good Vintage Condition (VGVC): Shows some signs of age and use but is still in good overall shape.

Good Vintage Condition (GVC): Shows clear signs of wear, use, and age.

Perfectly Imperfect: This is not an official term. We've adopted it for the purposes of The Timeless Edit because we believe damaged items still have value. Our definition of Perfectly Imperfect is an item that has visible damage but remains beautiful as a decorative piece or suitable for use in a different capacity from that for which it was originally designed.

Common Flaws Found in Antique and Vintage Items

Air Bubbles: Air bubbles in hand-blown glass are a natural result of the traditional glassmaking process, where air becomes trapped in the molten glass during its creation. They are often seen as a sign of authenticity, indicating the item is handmade and unique, rather than a defect. While a small number of bubbles is generally acceptable, a high concentration of bubbles may indicate fragility. In some cases, air bubbles are an intentional decorative feature. Air bubbles are also found in Depression Glass due to its mass production method, where glass was quickly moulded with little concern for perfection — these bubbles are a common characteristic that signifies authentic pieces.

Bottom Wear: Common in older items, especially glass, and often an indication of age. Wear to the base of an item is caused by everyday use over time and includes scratches, scuffs, shallow chips, flakes, and flea bites.

Chip: Chips are considered either shallow or deep. A shallow chip is typically inconspicuous. A deep chip is large enough to be immediately apparent.

Crazing: Crazing is a web of fine cracks that occurs only in the glaze layer of fine bone china and porcelain. It is a normal occurrence, particularly in older items.

  • Clean Crazing: The cracks are clear, without any staining from food, moisture, or other contaminants. Clean crazing can be used as an intentional decorative design element.
  • Stained Crazing: This occurs when food particles, bacteria, or other contaminants get into the cracks over time, causing them to darken and become visually conspicuous. Items with stained crazing are not recommended for use with food but are still suitable as decorative pieces.

Firing Flaw: An original flaw caused during the firing process. Examples include pinholes or blisters in the glaze, grit stuck to the glaze, stains caused by an impurity in the porcelain, and shrinkage cracks that have opened during the drying or firing process. This is not considered damage.

Flake: A small and shallow chip which breaks the surface of an item.

Flea Bite: A tiny, pin-sized chip or nick in the surface of an item. It is a common form of imperfection in older items, especially glass.

Hairline Crack: A narrow and tight break going through the glaze and porcelain body, visible from both sides of the item. It is not always immediately obvious and can be missed on first inspection. Generally, a hairline crack does not affect the integrity of the item.

Maker's Miss: An unintentional inclusion or air bubble in the item caused or overlooked by the glassblower or maker during the manufacturing process.

Scratch: A mark which compromises the surface of an item and which feels raised, rough, or sharp to the touch. Not to be confused with Straw Marks and marks which can occur during the manufacturing process.

Straw Marks: Marks on the external surface of glass that look like fine lines or even scratches. They occur when molten glass is cut with shears and the resulting mark doesn't fully smooth out before the glass cools and sets. They are not considered damage but are instead a common characteristic of old, handmade, or machine-pressed glass. Unlike a scratch, straw marks feel smooth to the touch. Straw marks are commonly found in Depression and Carnival Glass.

Water Mark / Stain: Patches, ridges, deposits, and clouding on glass caused by water left standing in the vessel for a lengthy period. Such stains cannot be removed.

Materials and Techniques

Backstamp: The maker's mark printed or impressed on the base of a ceramic or glass item. Backstamps typically include the manufacturer's name, country of origin, pattern name, and sometimes a date code. They are the primary tool for authenticating and dating vintage pieces, and their design often evolved over a maker's history, allowing collectors to pinpoint when a piece was produced.

Bone China: A type of porcelain developed in England in the late eighteenth century, distinguished by the inclusion of bone ash (calcined animal bone) in the clay body. Bone ash gives bone china its characteristic creamy translucency, warmth, and exceptional strength relative to its delicacy. When held to the light, genuine bone china glows. It is the material of choice for the great English china makers — Royal Albert, Royal Doulton, Shelley, Coalport, and many others.

Gilding / Gold Trim: The application of gold to the surface of ceramic or glass as a decorative finish. On vintage pieces, gilding was typically applied using real gold — most commonly 22-carat gold — either by hand or by transfer, then fired to fuse it permanently to the surface. The quality and condition of gilding is an important factor in assessing a piece; worn or rubbed gilding is a common sign of heavy use.

Hand-painted vs Transfer Print: Hand-painted decoration is applied directly to the ceramic surface by an artist, making each piece subtly unique. Transfer printing involves applying a pre-printed design to the surface, allowing for consistent, repeatable patterns at scale. Many pieces combine both techniques — a transfer-printed ground with hand-painted highlights or gilding added over the top. Both methods are found across the great ceramics houses and each has its own collectible appeal.

Iridescence / Carnival Glass: An iridescent surface effect on glass, achieved by spraying metallic salts onto the surface of hot glass before it cools. The result is a lustrous, rainbow-like sheen that shifts colour in different lights. Carnival Glass — so named because it was commonly given as prizes at fairgrounds in the early twentieth century — is the most widely collected form of iridescent glass, produced in the United States, England, and Australia from around 1908 onwards.

Opalescent Glass: Glass that appears milky or translucent white in direct light but takes on a blue or lavender glow when backlit. The effect is achieved by adding bone ash or other opacifying agents to the glass batch. Opalescent glass is closely associated with the Art Nouveau movement and is a signature technique of René Lalique, whose pieces are among the most sought-after examples of the form.

Porcelain: A ceramic material fired at very high temperatures, resulting in a hard, dense, non-porous body. Unlike bone china, traditional porcelain does not contain bone ash. Hard-paste porcelain — the original European formula, developed in the early eighteenth century — is the material of Meissen, Sèvres, and Royal Copenhagen. Soft-paste porcelain, an earlier European approximation, has a slightly different texture and translucency. Both are distinct from bone china, though all three are commonly referred to as "china" in everyday use.

Royal Worcester is one of the oldest continuously operating porcelain manufacturers in the world. Founded in 1751 in the city of Worcester, England — the "51" that appears in the centre of many backstamps is a direct reference to that founding year — it has been producing fine porcelain for longer than Australia has existed as a European settlement. That kind of history leaves a mark, and it shows in the pieces.

Where many English potteries chased volume, Royal Worcester chased quality. It became known for its exceptional gilding, its hand-painted fruit and floral subjects, and a standard of craftsmanship that placed it firmly in the prestige tier of British ceramics — alongside Royal Crown Derby and Minton, but with its own distinct character: warmer, more naturalistic, less formal than its rivals.

Evesham Gold — The Pattern That Defined a Generation

Evesham Gold was introduced in the 1960s and became one of Royal Worcester's most successful patterns of the 20th century. Named for the Vale of Evesham in Worcestershire — famous for its fruit orchards since the Middle Ages — the pattern features autumnal fruits rendered with the kind of painterly naturalism that Royal Worcester had been perfecting for two centuries: plums, peaches, blackberries, and apples tumbling across a cream ground, framed by 22-carat gold banding.

It was designed for everyday use but made to a standard that rewarded close attention. The fruit motifs vary subtly from piece to piece — a legacy of the hand-finishing process — which means no two items are quite identical. That quiet individuality is part of what makes Evesham Gold so enduring.

The pattern was discontinued, which is precisely when collectors started paying attention. It now has a devoted following in Australia, the UK, and North America — people completing inherited sets, or simply drawn to the particular warmth of autumnal fruit on a well-made plate.

Reading a Royal Worcester Backstamp

Royal Worcester backstamps are a reliable guide to dating a piece. The "51" in the centre refers to the 1751 founding date. A gold mark generally indicates a prestige piece from the brand's higher production tier. Black printed marks with "Made in England" are typical of post-1942 production. "Oven to Tableware" markings indicate pieces designed for practical everyday use — a later development in the range.

For collectors, the backstamp is useful context, but condition and pattern clarity matter more to value than mark colour alone.

Care

Royal Worcester pieces with gold gilding — including Evesham Gold — should be hand washed with a mild detergent and a soft cloth. Gold trim is vulnerable to abrasive cleaning agents and dishwasher detergents over time. Pieces with gold banding are not suitable for microwave use. When stacking, place a soft cloth or paper towel between pieces to prevent surface scratches to the pattern.

Collecting Royal Worcester in Australia

Royal Worcester arrived in Australian homes primarily through the postwar migration period and through department store imports — Myer, David Jones, and Grace Bros all stocked Royal Worcester at various points throughout the mid-20th century. Evesham Gold in particular was a popular wedding gift pattern from the 1960s through the 1980s, which means it turns up regularly in Australian estate sales and opportunity shops — often in excellent condition, having been used carefully and stored well.

For Australian collectors, Royal Worcester represents a direct connection to the British ceramic tradition that shaped so much of domestic life here. It is also, simply, beautiful — and that has always been reason enough.

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