Take vintage linens, old china, a doll's teacup, a gift from Nepal,
fresh flowers from the border, and what do you get? Tea for One!
My daughter Anne is the guest designer today, with a Tea for One setting for Tablescape Thursday (hosted by Susan at Between Naps On The Porch) and Vintage Thingies Thursday (hosted by Suzanne at Coloradolady). Click on their highlighted blog titles to see what everyone else is up to.
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Anne loves tea.
For her birthday, her sister sent her a tea set -- pot, sugar, and creamer -- handmade in Nepal.
It was a perfect gift!
It was a perfect gift!
Anne partnered this Eastern-looking set with a handle-less tea cup and saucer
that actually belong to her American Girl doll, Felicity!
Felicity is the Colonial-era doll, no longer featured in the American Girl Catalog since
Mattel took over the company and turned it -- well, we won't go there. Let's just say
American Girl and Pleasant Company are not what they used to be. Bigger is not always better.
But historically, Felicity would have drunk tea out of this type of cup --
no handles, and made in China for the export market.
that actually belong to her American Girl doll, Felicity!
Felicity is the Colonial-era doll, no longer featured in the American Girl Catalog since
Mattel took over the company and turned it -- well, we won't go there. Let's just say
American Girl and Pleasant Company are not what they used to be. Bigger is not always better.
But historically, Felicity would have drunk tea out of this type of cup --
no handles, and made in China for the export market.
What is tea without a cookie or two? Chocolate is always good, especially when served on a blue and white dish, Indies Blue, from Johnson Brothers. The napkin is damask, smooth vintage Irish linen, with a woven-in border of blue:
Underneath it all, a bridge cloth, one from the box of vintage family-made linens my mother-in-law sent me two weeks ago. This one is heavy, loosely-woven linen, beautifully hand-embroidered in what looks to me like perle cotton:
A closer look at the Nepal-ese tea set. Sugar and creamer:
The tea pot is a beautiful shape;
love the bent wooden handle, so practical -- no pot holder needed!
love the bent wooden handle, so practical -- no pot holder needed!
The blue looks "rubbed" -- it allows the base color to glow through; lovely.
You must have some pretties on every table. On this one, Anne used the bottom of a covered Asian-inspired blue and white casserole I got years ago at a Bombay and Company outlet store.
She filled it with flowers from the borders at That Old House. We only had to chase down two stowaway ants.
She filled it with flowers from the borders at That Old House. We only had to chase down two stowaway ants.
Also visiting, a little good luck Lenox elephant, and a small figurine . . .
we don't know who he is, but he seems to fit in!
we don't know who he is, but he seems to fit in!
Put it all together. . .
It's an Asian-Vintage-Fusion Tea for One!
Have a wonderful Thursday! -- Cass
Have a wonderful Thursday! -- Cass
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