Where is portmeirion pottery made




















To appeal to younger consumers, the company has also developed products in partnership with designers such as Ted Baker and Sophie Conran. Mr Atherton says the key to success will lie in understanding cultures around the world and adapting products accordingly. Asian consumers, for example, buy more bowls than plates. To widen the appeal of its ranges, the company has been expanding sales of non-ceramic products such as glassware and textiles.

Portmeirion also wants its products to be given as gifts on special occasions. A lot of our pieces can be sold as individual gifts.

Many skilled workers left the industry in the s and s and young people were encouraged to pursue other careers. We have brought in a lot of apprentices because we need to train people in some of the production skills we need.

Manage cookies. Room Cottage Camper Van 1 Guests. Children years 0 1 2. Infants years 0 1 2. Room Cottage Camper Van 2 Guests. Room Cottage Camper Van 3 Guests. Room Cottage Camper Van 4 Guests. Room Cottage Camper Van 5 Guests. Promotional Code. In , due to the continuing demand for its products, Portmeirion listed on the London Stock Exchange, transferring to the Alternative Investment Market in Further enhancing its brand portfolio in , Portmeirion acquired the intellectual property and trade names of Spode and Royal Worcester.

Founded by Josiah Spode in , Spode is, and has always been, a great British brand based in the heart of the Potteries, Stoke-on-Trent.

Royal Worcester was established in and has a rich and diverse design heritage. Following substantial investment in the brands under Portmeirion Group ownership, Spode and Royal Worcester ranges continue to flourish and have been complemented by the addition of new collections such as Royal Worcester Wrendale Designs.

In , Portmeirion acquired the premier brand for placemats and coasters, Pimpernel. These two businesses were combined and Portmeirion Potteries was born. In fact, Portmeirion Potteries continues to manufacture Susan's designs as well as others in the same factory in Stoke-on-Trent to this very day.

Susan Williams-Ellis lithographing a Botanic Garden piece. Susan's early Portmeirion designs include Malachite and Moss Agate Neither was produced in large quantities but both received high critical acclaim. Her next designs featured unusually bright, floral images Portmeirion Rose and Tiger Lily , and then followed the iconic Totem design in With layered glazes of various hues, Totem brought Portmeirion well and truly to the forefront of fashionable design in this memorable era of evolving and revolutionary British design style.

With an ever-evolving reputation for striking design, Susan later created Magic City and Magic Garden which both featured strong and bold surface patterns. The design had been directly pencilled onto a cylindrical coffee pot and was simply stunning — so much so it inspired Portmeirion to create the Magic Garden Graphite collection in celebration of its 50th anniversary in



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000