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Herend

Vintage “Pink Apponyi” Pin/Trinket Dish – Herend, Hungary

Vintage “Pink Apponyi” Pin/Trinket Dish – Herend, Hungary

Regular price CHF 88.00
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A petite jewel from Herend: this hand-painted Pink Apponyi dish brings the richness of raspberry florals and real gold accents to your dressing table, coffee tray, or nightstand.

The Apponyi pattern—adapted by Herend in the early 20th century from their famous “Indian Basket/Chinese Bouquet” family—celebrates stylised peonies and scrolling leaves, each flower petal shaded by hand.

Small in size, high in charm - perfect for rings, tea bags, petits fours, or simply to admire.

  • Material: Porcelain, hand-painted with gilt (gold) highlights
  • Maker: Herend Porcelain Manufactory
  • Motif: Apponyi / Chinese Bouquet in raspberry (often called Pink Apponyi; pattern code AV), stylised peony bouquet with tendrils and gold details
  • Style: Classic European luxury porcelain; rococo-inspired scalloped form with basket-weave relief to the rim
  • Place of Origin: Herend, Hungary
  • Mark: Blue HEREND HUNGARY – HANDPAINTED shield mark (post-1948 export mark). This version is consistent with 1970s–1990s production.
  • Date of Manufacture: c. 1970s–1990s
  • Condition: Very good vintage condition with light, honest surface wear to the well and minute handling to the gilding commensurate with age; no cracks, chips or repairs noted.
  • Dimension: approx. 12.0 × 8.0 × 2.0 cm (4.7" × 3.1" × 0.8")
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Origin & Maker

Founded in 1826 in the village of Herend by Vince Stingl and transformed under Mór Fischer from 1839, Herend grew from a small workshop into one of Europe’s most celebrated makers of hand-painted, hard-paste porcelain. International acclaim followed the Great Exhibition in London (1851) and subsequent world fairs, where Herend’s virtuoso painting and rich gilding attracted royal patrons, including Queen Victoria—whose 1851 order gave the famous “Victoria” butterfly-and-peony pattern its name—as well as the Austro-Hungarian court and the Rothschilds (inspiring the charming “Rothschild Bird” design).

Herend’s signature lies in its entirely hand-decorated surfaces: layered enamels, 24-carat gilded details and exquisitely fine outlines. Iconic motifs include Apponyi (a pared-back take on Victoria), the Fishnet/Fish-scale decoration (now synonymous with Herend figurines), and a broad repertoire of Oriental-inspired florals and fauna. Despite nationalisation in the 20th century, the manufactory safeguarded its artisan training and, since privatisation in 1993, continues to produce table services and figurines that marry courtly tradition with meticulous craftsmanship.

Today, collectors prize Herend for its painterly detail, depth of colour, and continuity of hand-work—each piece signed by the artist—making it one of the few European porcelain houses where the 19th-century atelier spirit still defines contemporary production.