A 185-piece tableware and coffee service, 'Millennium-line Marianne', Christineholm, Fyrklövern.
Collector's documents included.
Dinner and coffee service in porcelain with decoration in blue and platinum:
24 dinner plates 26 cm
24 soup plates 22.5 cm
24 starter plates 20 cm
12 side plates 17 cm
7 coffee cups with saucers
Cake stand 30 cm
Sugar bowl with lid 12 cm
Creamer 10 cm
Sauce boat 19 cm
Soup tureen with lid 30 cm
Salt and pepper shakers 8 cm
Three round bowls 16-23.5 cm
Three oval serving platters 21-37.5 cm
Glass service with silver decoration:
Jug 26 cm
Decanter with stopper 24.5 cm
Ice bucket 12 cm
Bowl 12.5 cm
Six highball glasses 14.5 cm
Five cognac glasses 11 cm
Six whiskey glasses 8 cm
Six martini glasses 14 cm
Cutlery service in silver plate:
Twelve table forks 19 cm
Twelve table knives with stainless steel blades 21.5 cm
Twelve table spoons 19 cm
Eleven coffee spoons 14 cm
A pair of salad servers 24.5 cm
Sauce ladle 20 cm
Soup ladle 29 cm
Cake server 24 cm
Serving spoon 22 cm
Butter knife 15 cm
Cutlery with wear. Decanter with a chip. Glass bowl with a chip. Two coffee saucers with a chip.
Sigvard Bernadotte was a Swedish prince who gained international recognition as both a designer and illustrator. He was born in 1907 at Drottningholm Palace as the son of then Crown Prince Gustaf VI Adolf and Princess Margaret of Great Britain.
Sigvard Bernadotte became the first in the Bernadotte family to obtain an academic degree. In the fall of 1926, he enrolled at Uppsala University, studying art history and political science among other subjects. In 1930, he was admitted to the Decorative Line at the Technical School in Stockholm, studying under Professor Olle Hjortzberg, whose influence shaped the strict and concentrated design for which Bernadotte later became famous. In 1934, Sigvard Bernadotte married Erika Patzek, resulting in his loss of succession rights to the crown.
Sigvard Bernadotte is one of Sweden's most famous designers, having worked with a wide variety of techniques and materials. He designed everything from everyday items to exclusive silverware, notably for Georg Jensen. Bernadotte was also occasionally commissioned by Illums Bolighus in Copenhagen, the carpet company Nessim, Bing & Grøndahl, and the German company Rosenthal. For two decades, Sigvard Bernadotte was a central figure in Scandinavian industrial design, and his company became an informal design school, praised for its meticulously crafted function and form in its products. Bernadotte, among other things, designed the so-called 'Margrethe bowls' and the 'virr-varr' pattern that adorns numerous tabletops.