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Ziegler Schaffhausen

Unusual Swiss Mid-Century Handle Vase by Gustav Spörri – Ziegler Schaffhausen – c.1959

Unusual Swiss Mid-Century Handle Vase by Gustav Spörri – Ziegler Schaffhausen – c.1959

Regular price CHF 120.00
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This elegant teardrop-shaped Ziegler Schaffhausen vase carries the late-1950s look championed by Gustav Spörri: hand-applied bands of sage, mustard, coral and inky black, animated with dotted and stitched sgraffito lines.

The slim neck and arched handle emphasise the vertical rhythm, while the factory paper label at the spout confirms origin.

A lively accent piece that displays beautifully alone or as a pair with your other striped Ziegler vases.

  • Material: Glazed ceramic, hand-decorated
  • Maker: Ziegler Schaffhausen, Switzerland
  • Motif: Vertical polychrome stripes with sgraffito lines and dots (Spörri design)
  • Style: Mid-Century Modern
  • Place of Origin: Switzerland
  • Mark: Unmarked; decoration and form consistent with Ziegler Schaffhausen
  • Date of Manufacture: c.1960s
  • Condition: Excellent vintage condition; minor, age-appropriate wear only

Dimension:
Height: 18 cm | 7.1 in
Width (max Ø): 14 cm | 5.5 in
Weight: 0.3 kg

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Origin & Maker

Established in 1828, Ziegler Schaffhausen (Tonwarenfabrik Ziegler A.G.) grew from a 19th-century pottery and stove-tile maker into one of Switzerland’s most enduring ceramic names. Across the early 20th century the factory produced stoneware and tablewares alongside architectural ceramics, building a reputation for reliable bodies and crisp decoration.

After the Second World War, Ziegler entered a creative high point. Under the artistic direction of Gustav Spörri (1902–1976) in the late 1940s through the 1960s, the range modernised: simplified forms, rhythmic linework, and humane, tactile glazes captured the spirit of Swiss Mid-Century Modern. Pieces from this era—handle vases, lidded pots, and clean cylindrical forms—show restrained geometry and warm, nature-tinted palettes.

Though factory production wound down in the early 1970s, Ziegler’s legacy remains vivid. Collectors prize the combination of disciplined Swiss manufacture and quietly expressive surface design—ceramics that feel both practical and poetic, perfectly at home in contemporary interiors.