slowcoach to china

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Another meander through the trivia of my life, but then I don't really worry too much about the big stuff.

I love tea, I'm a tea bore in the way some people are about wine; I sneer at everyday blends, pour scorn on the notion that Twining's is 'posh tea', and wax lyrical about the merits of single garden teas. Tea**g is a dirty word in my view. The only thing that casts a shadow on my connoisseur's credentials is the state of my crockery.

I have a fairly large collection of Denby Chevron, assembled from charity shops and eBay. As the pattern was in production for twenty years there are slight variations in shape and colour, which I like - they sort of match, but the variations give it character. I'm not really comfortable using it when I have visitors, as it might look a bit shabby, and worst of all it's green, whereas my living room is blue.

So, I thought I'd buy some nice branded china, something by Doulton for instance, not too fancy or too fussy (I can't abide floral patterns, unless it's totally mad chintz, and then I wouldn't want to live with that). Problem one was budget, buying new cups, saucers, plates etc could set me back a small fortune; there was eBay but that would give the same problem of poor matching unless I bought a complete service from one seller, which would be pretty much as expensive. I cast my net a little further...

Browsing the vintage porcelain section of eBay was a huge mistake - it sent me straight back to my childhood. My grandmother had a huge black oak Welsh dresser arrayed with willow-pattern plates, copper-lustre jugs, and a lot of very bright 'imari' / gaudy Welsh china. I had to have something similar to the latter.

There are complete services of Victorian and Edwardian china listed on eBay that are quite inexpensive, but that feels like cheating. My grandmother's was built up in stages, and while they looked very similar, they were different. So the new plan is to buy a service of six cups, saucers and possibly side plates, a tea set of teapot, milk jug and sugar bowl, and additional sandwich and cake plates. This is going to take some time, and of course I'll need to get appropriate teaspoons. However, when the tea's brewed and the cucumber sandwiches laid out, it'll be authentic.

This is all quite sad I know, but nothing compared to what I've done in photography, and in no way undermined by my buying brand new Denby Blue Jetty cups, saucers and plates on the way home from work today (they were on sale). It might however put a ding in my left-wing ideals, because as we all know 'all proper tea is theft' :)

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