Royal Crown Derby

WhereDerby, UK
WhatHand-painted bone china
Since its inceptio... Since its inception in 1750, Royal Crown Derby has held the title as one of the world’s finest producers of bone china. This is reflected in its story, having accumulated a long list of admirable projects that includes the first-class dining suite of the Titanic. Calling cards are high-quality materials and intricate finishing touches, both of which are anchored by human touch. As such, each piece takes a journey from the hands of one master craftsperson to another, passing through the Derbyshire workshop until it’s worthy of the ceramicist’s signature backstamp. The clientele speaks volumes too, counting every British monarch since King George III. Since its inception in 1750, Royal Crown Derby has held the title as one of the world’s finest producers of bone china. This is reflected in its story, having accumulated a long list of admirable projects that includes the first-class dining suite of th Since its inception in 1750, Royal Crown Derby has held the title as one of the world’s finest producers of bone china. This is reflected in its story, having accumulated a long list of admirable projects that includes the first-class dining suite of the Titanic. Calling cards are high-quality materials and intricate finishing touches, both of which are anchored by human touch. As such, each piece takes a journey from the hands of one master craftsperson to another, passing through the Derbyshire workshop until it’s worthy of the ceramicist’s signature backstamp. The clientele speaks volumes too, counting every British monarch since King George III.

26 products

26 products

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Royal Crown Derby

Since its inception in 1750, Royal Crown Derby has held the title as one of the world’s finest producers of bone china. This is reflected in its story, having accumulated a long list of admirable projects that includes the first-class dining suite of the Titanic. Calling cards are high-quality materials and intricate finishing touches, both of which are anchored by human touch. As such, each piece takes a journey from the hands of one master craftsperson to another, passing through the Derbyshire workshop until it’s worthy of the ceramicist’s signature backstamp. The clientele speaks volumes too, counting every British monarch since King George III.