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Capodimonte-Imported Italian Favors-Italian Capodimonti Porcelain
Elegant Italian Capodimonte is the finest quality Italian Capodimonte porcelain and china figurines, flowers and statuettes you can get. These rare italian wedding favors will help make your affair one to remember.
The Passion for Italian Capodimonte Porcelain A number of years ago, while working in a large antique mall, I met a woman frantically looking for Capodimonte electric
The way she was acting, I thought maybe her life depended on finding one.
Of course, I found out later that she hadn’t discovered that the fountain of youth might be hidden within Capodimonte porcelain. She was just a crazed collector seeking something for which she had developed a passion, and understandably so.
While many people turn their noses up at Capodimonte porcelain thinking about the stuff sold on home shopping channels during the last two decades, some of the lamps produced by the company during the 1940s and '50s can be quite striking and lovely on display in the right setting. My mother owns a particularly pretty one, so I knew why that wild woman at the antique mall wanted them so badly.
History of Capodimonte Capodimonte porcelain actually dates back centuries. The first pieces fired by this company were produced in Naples, Italy from 1759 to 1780 at the Royal Factory, according to the Capodimonte Limited website.
“The Capodimonte name was synonymous with the finest quality Neapolitan porcelain and ceramics from that period onward,” the site explains. The Royal Factory, which no longer exists, came to being when King Charles of Naples married Maria Amalia. She was the granddaughter of Augustus II, who in addition to being the King of Poland, also founded the first European hard paste porcelain factory in Meissen, Germany.
King Charles developed a curiosity about porcelain through his new wife’s family. This interest turned into a passion that led to many years of research and development before the Royal Factory came about.
Once the formula for porcelain paste was perfected, many skilled craftsmen and artisans, both men and women, worked to produce fine Capodimonte pieces. Plates, vases, small and large bowls, tea and coffee cups, large and small jugs, sugar bowls, tea caddies, teapots, snuff-boxes, and walking stick handles mounted in gold are among the fine pieces produced at the factory in Italy.
The factory eventually moved to Spain and back to Italy again several decades later under the direction of King Charles’ son, Ferdinand. During this period, the shape, style and decoration of the porcelain production was similar to that of the original Capodimonte factory.
Collecting Capodimonte Today While this history is interesting to say the least, these aren’t the types of items most collectors of Capodimonte porcelain find offered for sale in antiques shops today. Most of the oldest examples are in impressive high-end collections and museums now.
What modern collectors do find are mid-century electric lamps like my mother’s, figurines of varying quality, carefully molded flowers, which are actually quite beautiful, and other decorative objects.
“The Capodimonte logo, in the present day, is not necessarily a guarantee of porcelain or ceramic quality. Neither is it a guarantee that the product is in fact porcelain or ceramic,” Capodimonte Limited states. In other words, it pays to do a little research to know exactly what you’re buying before plunking down a pretty penny on a piece of porcelain.
To familiarize yourself with what’s being produced today under the Capodimonte Arte’ name, you can always visit the company's website. There you’ll also find resources for appraisals and repairs, which can always come in handy.
Quick Facts About Italian Capodimonte Porcelain
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The first pieces fired by Capodimonte were produced in Naples, Italy from 1759 to 1780 at the Royal Factory.
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Modern collectors rarely find the oldest of Capodimonte pieces. They do find mid-century electric lamps, figurines of varying quality, carefully molded flowers and other decorative objects made during the last century.
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While out of print, Capodimonte Collectibles by Bloom (Publications International) is a good reference on this type of porcelain, and can be found through out-of-print booksellers online.
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Throw a Traditional Italian Wedding
Despite what you might think, you don't have to be a sun-kissed couple fresh from the shores of Sicily in order to have an Italian wedding. A couple of Italian descent are more than welcome to weave Italian traditions into their wedding -- whether or not they've ever set foot in Italy.
Many of us find that the most satisfying weddings combine nostalgic old traditions with contemporary ways of doing things. And old religious observances, historic dances, and traditional Italian foods are sure to give your wedding a warm Italian heart.
As everyone knows, Roman Catholicism is Italy's primary religion. So a traditional Italian wedding typically means a traditional Catholic wedding as well, including a full mass with the ceremony. However, it's still true that not every Italian is Catholic. Although it may be a bit unusual, if you and your partner aren't Catholic, you can still incorporate the Italian traditions in your reception. One of the most charming is the dove release, symbolizing the love and affection of each newlywed for the other, although this tradition is not very old.
No Italian wedding is complete without a few traditional dances, such as the Tarantella. Although the Tarantella's origin is somewhat murky, most of the stories about it involve a spider bite, and tell of a dance either meant to counteract the venom, or one that simply mimics the uncontrolled motions of the sufferer. At any rate, these days the Tarantella is performed at wedding parties to wish the couple a fine future together. Participants form a circle and dance in a clockwise direction, until the music speeds up and the dancers must change direction. The tempo changes several times, each time forcing the dancers to change direction and dance even faster. The Tarantella continues until it becomes impossible to keep up, and the dance falls apart.
What's the most distinguishing aspect of an Italian wedding? The food, of course. The Italians invented the evocative word abbondanza, which somehow means something more than mere "abundance," and no Italian wedding would be complete without an overwhelming feast of many courses. Traditionally, the wedding reception begins with an antipasto course of cheeses, olives, mushrooms, and pickled sweet peppers. This course is followed by subsequent courses starring pastas, meats, salads, soups, and desserts, each one punctuated by freely flowing wine.
It's interesting to note that some of the foods at an Italian wedding have symbolic overtones. For example, the giving of sugar-coated almonds to guests symbolizes that marriage is both bitter and sweet. The number of almonds given is associated with traditional meanings: for example, three almonds speak to fertility, while five almonds wish for wealth.
Another authentic Italian wedding tradition is the breaking of a glass at the reception's end, somewhat like a similar tradition within the Jewish faith. However, the deeper symbolism underlying these traditions is very different. Within Judaism, the broken glass symbolizes human frailty and the hardship the couple's ancestors endured as a result of their faith. But in Italian weddings, the broken glass points toward the future. The number of shards is said to predict the number of happy years the couple will have together.
It's deeply satisfying for couples of Italian descent to weave these traditional elements into their modern-day wedding. Even if only your distant relatives still reside on Italian soil and you've never been to Italy, it's still absolutely fine to follow these traditions. And that's not to say you have to be Italian, either -- all that's required is that you appreciate the richness of Italian culture and are willing to try something new.
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