Antique Sheffield Silver Plate & Ornately Engraved Fruit Service
Antique Sheffield Silver Plate & Ornately Engraved Fruit Service
Exquisite antique Sheffield silver plated and ornately engraved fruit service. This unique English silver plated service was designed by Charles James Allen and Sidney Darwin, Circa 1879-1922.
The boxed set is 4 cm High, 24,5 cm Wide and 18,5 cm Deep.
The material was accidentally invented by Thomas Boulsover, of Sheffield's Cutlers Company, in 1743. While trying to repair the handle of a customer's decorative knife, he heated it too much and the silver started to melt. When he examined the damaged handle, he noticed that the silver and copper had fused together very strongly. Experiments showed that the two metals behaved as one when he tried to reshape them, even though he could clearly see the two different layers.
Boulsover set up in business, funded by Strelley Pegge of Beauchief, and carried out further experiments in which he put a thin sheet of silver on a thick ingot of copper and heated the two together to fuse them. When the composite block was hammered or rolled to make it thinner, the two metals were reduced in thickness at similar rates. Using this method, Boulsover was able to make sheets of metal which had a thin layer of silver on the top surface and a thick layer of copper underneath. When this new material was used to make buttons, they looked and behaved like silver buttons but were a fraction of the cost.