Category Archives: Art Deco

Fiesta 201: Part Seven Fiesta Kitchen Kraft Platter and Covered Jug

Fiesta Kitchen Kraft label.

Fiesta Kitchen Kraft label. Image from thepotterypapers.blogspot.com

                                                                                                     CLICK HERE FOR PART SIX 

Part Seven of Fiesta 201 will take a look at the Fiesta Kitchen Kraft platter and covered jug.

 

Royal Metal Manufacturing Oval Platter

 

Royal Metal Manufacturing Co., oval platter in green in chrome metal holder.

Royal Metal Manufacturing Co. Oval Platter, green glaze in the metal holder. Image from liveauctioneers.com.

Dates of production: 1936 – 1944.

Available colors: red, blue, yellow, green.

 

Red platter for Royal Metal Manufacturing, Co / Fiesta Kitchen Kraft.

Red Fiesta Kitchen Kraft (Royal Metal Manufacturing, Co.) Oval Platter. Image from vintageamericanpottery.com.

If the Fiesta platter and Kitchen Kraft pie plate had a child it would be the Royal Metal Manufacturing Oval Platter. This platter has the angled straight sides of the pie plate with the oval shape and colors of the the platter while lacking the concentric circles of that piece. And it is also approximately an inch larger than the Fiesta counterpart. These platters originally came with a metal holder made by the Royal Metal Manufacturing, Co. While probably sold in conjunction with Fiesta Kitchen Kraft it was never officially part of the Fiesta Kitchen Kraft line. And never listed on any price list.

 

Royal Metal Manufacturing Oval Platter in cobalt blue.

A cobalt blue oval platter. Image from vinatageamericanpottery.com.

 

Today this platter is relatively easy to find, which suggests it sold well during the 1930s and 1940s. As a result, on the collector’s market, it is a pretty inexpensive addition to a collection.

 

Yellow oval platter in its chrome holder.

Yellow oval platter in a chrome holder. Image from liveauctioneers.com.

Royal Metal Manufacturing (Fiesta Kitchen Kraft) Oval Platter: Book value: $55.00 – $82.00 *. Current market prices: $35.00 red with metal holder – $60.00 cobalt blue with metal holder (liveauctioneers.com).  **

*Book values come from Fiesta, Harlequin, Kitchen Kraft Dinnerwares, Schiffer Publishing 2000. These reflect pre-2008 recession values. And like Fiesta items glazed in red and cobalt tend to have higher values than those same pieces glazed in yellow and green.

**These prices reflect what these bowls are currently selling for online in excellent condition with no chips or cracks. 

 

Fiesta Kitchen Kraft Covered Jug

 

Fiesta Kitchen Kraft covered jug in the red glaze.

Red Fiesta Kitchen Kraft covered jug. Photo from liveauctioneers.com.

Dates of production: 1938 – 1944.

Available colors: red, blue, yellow, green.

Covered Jug original price: blue, yellow, green $1.50 ($29.04 in 2021); red $2.00 ($38.72 in 2021).

The Covered Jug is another of the Fiesta Kitchen Kraft items that falls into the hard to find category. And as such the price of them on the collector’s market reflects the scarcity of the piece.

 

A cobalt blue Fiesta Kitchen Kraft covered jug, with a partially intact paper label.

The jug in cobalt blue, with a partially intact paper label. Photo from ebay.

 

And to complicate things more, there were two sizes  produced for Fiesta Kitchen Kraft. The original size held a full two quarts or 64 ounces. Going into production in late 1937, this slightly larger jug is what was available at the time of Fiesta Kitchen Kraft’s introduction in January of 1938. But by February a new slightly smaller version started to replace the larger model. The smaller jug’s capacity was approximately the same as the larger one. And it is possible that there might have been some overlap in production of both sizes, until the molds wore out on the larger size jug.

 

The incised Fiesta Kitchen Kraft mark on the underside of the covered jug.

The incised Fiesta Kitchen Kraft mark on the underside of the covered jug. Photo from vintageamericanpottery.com.

 

Because of the item’s scarcity the covered jugs usually sell for high prices. Plus finding one in excellent condition takes some time, too. The knob on the lid is rather large and is not undercut to make gripping easy. So often the covered jug has small chips on the lid’s underside or along the top edge of the jug. The jug itself is also prone to hairline cracks, which is another issue that collectors need to watch out for before buying one.

 

 

Fiesta Kitchen Kraft Covered Jug: Book value:  $295.00 – $360.00*. Current market prices: $199.95 – $305.00 (ebay);   $375.00 (vintageamericanpottery.com)**

*Book values come from Fiesta, Harlequin, Kitchen Kraft Dinnerwares, Schiffer Publishing 2000. These reflect pre-2008 recession values. And like Fiesta items glazed in red and cobalt tend to have higher values than those same pieces glazed in yellow and green.

**These prices reflect what these bowls are currently selling for online in excellent condition with no chips or cracks. Intact paper labels increases the value of pieces up to 25%.

 

In part eight of Fiesta 201, Driving for Deco will take a look at one of the most collectible items from the Fiesta Kitchen Kraft line, the three covered jars.

CLICK HERE FOR PART EIGHT

Anthony & Chris (The Freakin’, Tiquen Guys)

 

Table Electrics – The Chase Speciality Line

Chase Brass & Copper logo.

Chase Brass & Copper logo. Image from a 1934 advertisement.

“It’s eaiser. . . it’s cleaner. . . it’s more fun. . . to cook at the table with Chase electrics!”  –               Chase Promotional Brochure, early 1930s.

The arbiter of good taste and mores, Emily Post said this:

     The present enthusiasm for every variety of buffet party would seem to be at least one happy result of the depression, which in shortening the purses of all of us, has brought appreciation of the simpler hospitalities. But whatever the cause, it is certainly true that among the nicest parties possible to give, the buffet luncheon, dinner or supper is far and away the most popular and smart.

 

Vogue Magazine Chase Advertisement featuring Emily Post from 1933.

October 1, 1933 Chase Advertisement from Vogue Magazine featuring Emily Post and the Electric Buffet Server. Image from proquest.com.

The Chase, Brass and Copper Company response to the changes the Great Depression brought to home entertaining was to introduce a series of products for informal dinner parties.

Electric Buffet Server

The Chase Electric Buffet Server.

The Chase Electric Buffet Server. From the author’s collection.

       The Chase Electric Buffet Server, designed for Chase by Lurelle Guild, is an electrically heated dish that it possible to keep four kinds of food hot on the buffet table without over cooking. Late guests do not worry the hostess because food stays hot and attractive for hours if necessary. For hot buffet supers and lunches, for late Sunday breakfasts, and late evening entertaining, the server is invaluable. Up to twenty people can be served from it. In the summer the server can be filled with cracked ice for salads, cold soups and desserts, etc. – 1935 Chase Catalog.

 

Patent drawing for the Chase Electric Buffet Server.

U.S. patent drawing for the Chase Electric Buffet Server. Image from Google Patents.

 

Chase Electric Buffet Server.

Chase Electric Buffet Server. Photo from blackrockgalleries.com.

Introduced in the fall of 1933, it stayed in production until 1940. And selling at $40.00 in 1934 ($815.00 today) it was expensive. For consumers just emerging from the worst of the depression the high price must have been daunting. So sales of the Electric Buffet Server were probably not that great. In an effort to boost sales Chase reduced the price to $30.00 ($580.00 today) in 1935. It is also a very large item, measuring 18 inches long, 11 inches wide and 5 inches high. So finding a place to store it in a 1930s home or apartment would be a challenge. Because of this the Electric Buffet Server is not an easy piece to find on the collectors market today.

The Electric Buffet Server is basically a modern version of a chafing dish. The base is filled with water then heated. But instead of using fire it heated the water by electricity, just as the name says, and maintained a constant temperature of about 170 degrees Fahrenheit. Filling the base with ice to chill salads and soups provided a summertime option. Four removable porcelain casserole dishes held the food in the chrome stand.

 

Leg and handle detail of the Chase Electric Buffet Server.

Chase Electric Buffet Server, leg and handle detail. Photo from blackrockgalleries.com.

Guild’s design with its black composition handles and lid finials contrasted against the shining chrome, the fluting on the legs and along the top edge and the octagonal design of the base, porcelain dishes and lids was very handsome. But Chase knew it needed a less expensive alternative.

 

April 1, 1934 Chase advertisement, featuring the Electric Buffet Server from Vogue Magazine.

Chase advertisement from the April 1, 1934 issue of Vogue, featuring the Chase Electric Buffet Server. Image from proquest.com.

 

Electric Snack Server

Early version of the Chase Electric Snack Server.

Chase Electric Server, early version with only one heat setting and walnut handles and finials. From the collection of the author.

 

And the Chase Electric Snack Server, introduced in 1934 proved to be that alternative. Smaller and at $19.50 ($398.00 today) less than half the price of the Electric Buffet Server. Chase further reduced the price to $12.50 ($250.00 today) in 1935. Just like the larger Buffet Server, the Snack Server worked the same way by heating water to about 170 degrees to keep food warm. Or keeping food cool in the summer by filling the base with cracked ice.

 

Patent drawing for the Chase Electric Snack Server.

U.S. Patent drawing for the Chase Electric Snack Server. Image from Google Patents.

 

The Electric Snack Server is an electrically heated dish with three food compartments, or casseroles. It is designed for serving warm luncheons for small families or parties where four to eight people are to be served. The golf foursome, for instance, can return home after a late game and find a hot supper waiting for them. Bridge parties can continue at cards without the interruption for the preparation of “something to eat.” The Electric Snack Server is 13 inches in diameter and 6 inches high.  –  1935 Chase Catalog

 

November 15, 1935 Chase advertisement from Vogue Magazine.

Chase advertisement from the November 15, 1935 issue of Vogue Magazine, featuring the Electric Snack Server. Image from proquest.com

Judging by how relatively easy it is to find this piece today, it must have sold well back in the 1930s. Howard Reichenbach’s very stylish design for the Snack Server featured bands of ribbing along the top and bottom of the base section. The three “step down” lids covered the one quart, Pyrex food containers.

In production from 1934 – 1942, the 1935 catalog states it being only available in polished chromium with black fittings, but soon polished copper servers and servers with walnut fittings were on the store shelves.

 

Detail of the original electrical setting.

Detail of the original electrical setting of the Chase Electric Snack Server. Photo from the collection of the author.

Originally the Snack Server came with only one heat setting, but starting in 1938 the “high / low” setting replaced the original. Also that year white plastic handles and lid finials became another option.

 

Later model Chase Electric Snack Server with white plastic trim and adjustable heat setting.

Chase Electric Snack Server, 1938 – 1942, featuring white handles, finials and lids. Photo from the collection of the author.

 

Later model Chase Electric Snack Server.

Later model Chase Electric Snack Server, detail of the high and low setting, “step-down” lid and white plastic finials. Photo from the collection of the author.

 

Table Butler

Chase Table Butler, chrome with white plastic trim.

Chase Table Butler, 1938 – 1942. Photo from the collection of the author.

 

The Chase Table Butler is another piece that is not too easy to find on the collector’s market today. Chase introduced it in late 1938 and kept in production until the war effort brought an end to the speciality line in 1942. The Table Butler is another strikingly moderne piece, with its ribbed banding at the top of the lower section and concentric rings on the top of the lid. White plastic trim is set off nicely against the chrome.

 

Showing the Pyrex bowl detail of the Chase Table Butler.

Pyrex bowl detail of the Chase Table Butler.

Food placed in a Pyrex Bowl inside the Table Butler is kept warm, electrically, to one hundred and eighty degrees. Retailing at $10.95 ($212.00 today) it was even less expensive than the Electric Snack Server.

The Chase Table Butler is for use on the table to keep many kinds of food piping hot during long meals and buffet parties, or between cooking and serving time. It has a heat-resisting glass baking dish in which such food as creamed chicken, creamed vegetables, lobster Newburg, scrambled eggs, lamb stew, macaroni and cheese, soups and chowders, cereals, and many other dishes can be kept piping hot. Without the glass dish, the Table Butler is used to heat rolls and muffins, to keep toast hot, to crisp potato chips and crackers, and to keep hot such foods as sausages, hambugers, croquettes, and French fried potatoes. – 1942 Chase Catalog.

 

Lid, bowl and power cord detail of the Chase Table Butler.

Chase Table Butler lid, bowl and original power cord detail. Photo from the collection of the author.

 

Table Chef

Here is another Chase Table Electric introduced in 1938 and discontinued in 1942. With its gleaming chrome body, ribbing along the base and scrolled, white plastic handles it matches stylistically to the Chase Table Butler and the Fairfax Tray. Designed by Walter Von Nessen this piece served a number of cooking functions. Originally the Table Chef retailed for $14.95 ($290.00 today).

 

The Chase Table Chef, part of the Chase Table Electric line.

The Chase Table Chef, designed by Walter Von Nessen. Photo from the collection of the author.

The Chase “Table Chef” Chafing Dish is a modern electric marvel. With it, nearly all forms of simple cooking can be done right at the table. It can be used as a chafing dish, or as a double boiler, by filling the lower container with water, and by using the upper container for the food to be cooked. A double heating element gives the choice for high or low heat – the “high” for cooking and the “low” for keeping foods piping hot. The Table Chef is invaluable for use in informal entertaining, but even more so for the small family which has one maid or one, and for the small apartment. And for party use – after a bridge game, or a small super after the movies, or summer meals on the porch.  – 1942 Chase Catalog.

That the catalog description mentions that this is an item for a small family with “one maid” is telling. It’s obvious, even without knowing the prices, that Chase marketing was aiming for middle class or higher customers.

 

Chase Table Chef, lid detail.

Chase Table Chef, lid detail. Photo from the collection of the author.

 

Electric Buffet Warming Oven

 

Chase Electric Buffet Oven in chrome and walnut trim.

1937 Chase Electric Buffet Oven in chrome with walnut trim. Photo from ebay.com.

Here is another Chase Table Electric to help the hostess have a successful party in the years leading up to the Second World War. A Charles Arcularius design the Buffet Warming Oven had a production life of five years from 1937 – 1942. Available only in Chrome with walnut handles and feet for the first year. Starting in 1938 ovens in copper with walnut or white plastic trim and a chrome and white plastic version became options.

 

Chase Electric Buffet Oven in copper and walnut.

Chase Electric Buffet Oven in copper with walnut trim. Photo from worthpoint.com.

The Electric Buffet Warming Oven is a smart little oven to keep food hot at the table. And what hostess hasn’t longed for a portable warming oven in which such foods as hot canapes, toast, rolls, sausages, potato chips, or anything else that needs to be kept crisp, could be kept hot and appetizing through a long party, or family meal?

The electric heat in the oven is a dry heat that keeps food crispy. On the other hand it won’t dry out such foods as toast or croquettes because it is such an even heat and the tightly fitted cover prevents the loss of moisture by evaporation.

Now the hostess doesn’t have to keep an anxious eye on the kitchen oven, dashing back and forth from the dining room for reinforcements. She can relax and enjoy the party or her family, knowing that the buffet warming oven is taking over the responsibility for keeping food hot. – 1942 Chase Catalog.

 

Inside detail of the Chase Electric Buffet Oven.

Chase Electric Buffet Oven, inside detail. Photo from ebay.com.

At $10.00 ($194.00 today) the Electric Buffet Oven was the least expensive of the Chase Table Electrics. Even so $10.00 was still above the price range for the average household just emerging from the depression.

 

The Chase Electric Buffet Oven in chrome with white plastic handles and feet.

Chase Electric Buffet Oven in chrome with white plastic handles and feet. Photo from picclick.com.

 

Because of the relatively high prices for the Chase Table Electrics, these pieces are not that easy to find today on the collector’s market. But they are out there and with some patience and hunting they can be tracked down. And they make a nice moderne addition to any Deco style kitchen or dining room *.

* If you are buying these for use make sure the power cord and plug are in good condition and are not fraying or frayed. Also check to make sure there are no splits in the metal before you pour in water or ice. The buffet server and snack server are prone to stress cracks.

Anthony & Chirs (The Freakin’ Tiquen Guys)

 

 

 

 

 

SOURCES

The Complete Chase – Donald-Brian Johnson & Leslie Piña

The Chase Era 1933 and 1942 Catalogs of the Chase Brass & Copper Co. – Donald-Brian Johnson & Leslie Piña

Chase Catalogs 1934 and 1935 Catalogs – Donald-Brian Johnson & Leslie Piña

Art Deco Chrome Book 2: A Collector’s Guide Industrial Design in the Chase Era – Richard J. Kilbride