Skip to main content

Learn to spot the difference between 1st and 2nd quality

Pictures from the shop

I am often asked about the difference between 1st and 2nd quality of Royal Copenhagen and Bing & Grondahl. This has prompted me to write a bit about it.
Basically it is about an evaluation of the porcelain made in the factory after production. The finished porcelain was lookes over to see if they live up to the quality demands of the factory. Those that were deemed 2nd quality, where then sold at a lower price than 1st quality.
Today only dinner service is sold as 2nd quality in factory sales, but the improved technique for burning the porcelain means that all the yearly cllector's items are sold as 1st quality now.
In the past a large part of the production could be of a quality that did not meet the quality demand, which made it necessary to sell it as 2nd quality.
However one must remember that the evaluation was made by people, so the evaluation of the porcelain could vary a lot, meaning that there was great difference in when figurines and plates were judged as 2nd quality. For instance many of the Christmas plates from Royal Copenhagen that were made into 2nd quality are hard to differentiate from 1st quality. You can see many of these for sale at reasonable prices on our page with Royal Copenhagen Christmas plates.

Royal Copenhagen 2nd quality marking
Bing & Grondahl 2nd quality marking

How is 2nd quality marked?



When Royal Copenhagen decided that a porcelain item did not meet the quality demands, it was marked with a scratch through the three waves in the mark of Royal Copenhagen. The scratch was drawn vertically through the waves. 
 
It is as mentioned still possible to buy dinner service in 2nd quality, but Royal Copenhagen stopped selling collector's items in 2nd quality in 1972- Before then you could also buy Royal Copenhagen Christmas plates in 2nd quality. We have many of these in stock and it is thus possible to acquire these years at an affordable price.




Like Royal Copenhagen Bing & Grondahl marked their porcelain with a scratch through the glazing over the company brand. The scratch of Bing & Grondahl was a horizontal line across the three towers in the brand. When the towers were absent the scratch was made across the B&G mark.
 
Bing & Grondahl sold both dinner service and figurines in second quality, but has never sold annual collector's items in 2nd quality. Thus Bing & Grondahl Christmas plates are in 1st quality.
 
If a Bing & Grondahl Christmas plate is set as 2nd quality in our stock, then it is due to our internal quality control.





It is 1st quality, if there is no scratch and 2nd quality, if there is a scratch.
  
Aside from this scratch it can often be difficult to differentiate between 1st and 2nd quality as it is often merely a question of slight discolorations that have led to it being judge as 2nd quality. Because of this the two qualities can often be very much alike, but the 2nd quality mark has great influence on the price.

Porcelain with 2 and 3 scratchs


Some dinner services are marked with both 2 and 3 scratches across the brand. This is not due to it being 3rd quality. The employees of the the porcelain factories could by 2nd quality porcelain for their own use, which was called employee items. These were usually marked with 2 and 3 scratched across the brand.
 
That means that if you have some porcelain with two or three scratches across the brand, then it is most likely employee items, which is the same as 2nd quality.

Birds from Royal copenhagen and Bing & Grondahl


I hope that this small newsletter has given you a good explanation about the 1st and 2nd quality of Royal Copenhagen and Bing & Grondahl porcelain. 
 

Comments

  1. What about the quality, or variation in the depth or darkness of the blue glaze?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Porcelain Factory Désirée - Svend Jensen - Old Copenhagen Blue

The porcelain factory Désirée , also called Old Copenhagen Blue and Svend Jensen abroad, was once among the best porcelain manufacturers in Denmark. The Désirée name has been used in different contexts over the years and was perhaps best known by the labels of the tableware series they produced. Popular dinnerware by Désirée The logo of Désirée Denmark Svend Jensen Old Copenhagen Blue Amongst the dinnerware which was produced by Désirée was Selandia . Selandia was the first dinnerware the porcelain factory Désirée made​​. Later, when it became popular to make stoneware and more robust dinnerware, came the series Thule , Diskos , Vesterhav and Jutlandia to be included in the range. Since the porcelain factory became more successful in the 1970s, 80s and 90s several popular dinnerware such as Polar , Mistletoe , Springtime and Scandinavia were introduced. All decorated and hand painted using the underglaze technique. Brief history behind Désirée The porcelain factory ...

News for the nerds...!

It is no less than fantastic artwork! When you read this newsletter you will certainly have a different view of the  normal  plates. You must admit that it is impressive that the Danish porcelain factory Bing & Grondahl all the way back in 1895 was able to make such works of art..., especially when you know what you know, when you have read this newsletter!   Well, you are curious to know more about how Christmas plates are actually made, so now we will have a brief run through. We have a more detailed description on our homepage about  how you make Christmas plates .  The process to make a Christmas plate is rather long. It all begins with the artist, who draw the motif after the measurements of the Christmas plate. Then the modeller engraves the motif into a plaster form like shown in the picture above. This plaster form is the base form for the production of work forms that are used to imprint the motif into the newly formed Christmas pl...