You have successfully subscribed! We will send you an email when the pottery you selected is updated.

Frequently Asked Questions

Authentic Dedham Art Pottery features a stamped mark, typically a rabbit within a crackle-glaze circle or Hugh C. Robertson’s cipher. Inspect the base for correct maker’s marks, glaze quality, and firing characteristics consistent with early 20th-century techniques.
Earlier Dedham Art Pottery, especially pre-1929 pieces by Hugh Robertson, commands higher prices due to rarity, hand-crafted techniques, and historical value. Age influences desirability, especially if provenance and original condition are intact.
Early Dedham pieces exhibit fine crackle glazes, hand-decorated motifs, and clear marks. Later reproductions may lack depth in glaze or show inconsistencies in motif execution. Study the maker’s mark, glaze texture, and form to verify the early origin.
Focus on the maker’s mark, condition, glaze type (e.g., oxblood, crackle), and motif. Pieces by Hugh Robertson are especially collectible. Provenance, form rarity, and glaze experimentation significantly impact value in the Dedham Art Pottery market, particularly for rare ceramic pottery vases, such as the experimental oxblood red vase.
Yes, rabbits, elephants, and floral borders are highly collectible. Rare glazes, such as oxblood red, and unusual forms elevate desirability. Collectors prioritize motifs with strong lines, clear decoration, and documented historical production under the Dedham Pottery name.