Designer
|
Not
Known
|
Maker
|
Karl
Holmburg
|
Marks
|
Sweden
501 impressed to base with logo
|
Material
|
Glazed
earthenware
|
Description
|
Small
rectangular bowl with rounded corners sloping to base. Heavy green speckled gloss glaze to
interior and exterior. Unglazed foot ring. Handle extending from upper third of
exterior of bowl, grooved on top.
|
Condition
|
Excellent
|
Number
|
501
impressed to base
|
Production
Date
|
Late
1960s
|
Width at rim
|
95mm
|
Width
at Base
|
60mm
|
Depth
|
40mm
|
Length
(with handle)
|
160mm
|
Weight
|
Varying
from 151 to 180 gm
|
Volume
|
150ml
|
Acquisition
|
Purchase
E-Bay
1
November 2017
|
Rameking
Reference Number
|
HOL
001-007
|
Pickings have been a little slim on the ramekin front lately, so
it came as a surprise when these came up on E-Bay recently. Almost unknown in Australia and still rare in
their native Sweden, these ramekins are unusual in that they were made by a
company that specialised in wooden products in the pre-internet days.
The large ramekin
with lid is approximately 22cm wide (including handle) x 110mm high. The
opening is approximately 120mm wide and the base is approximately 95mm
wide. It weighs approximately 670 grams. Impressed to the base is
"Sweden 520-2" and makers mark and there is a sticker on the
lid. The smaller ramekin with pourer and
lid is approximately 16omm wide (including handle) x 80mm high. The
opening is approximately 75mm wide and the base is approx. 65mm wide. It
weighs approximately 245 grams. On the base is "Sweden 520-2"
and makers mark and there is also a sticker on the lid on this piece. The
stickers read "Karl Holmburg Gotene UGNSELDFAST (Heat Resistant) Made in Sweden". The wooden tray is approx. 500mm long x 100mm
wide x 20mm high and has a heat branding stamp.
This pottery ramekin/tapas
set was made in the late 1960s in Sweden by Karl Napoleon Holmburg (1883-1955).
The set comprises 4 square ramekins, 1 large ramekin with lid, 1 smaller
ramekin (saucier) with pourer & lid and the wooden serving board of Bangkok
Teak (Tectona Grandis). In those days, Teak was an expensive,
exclusive timber used for high end products.
It was known as “Burmese Teak”, because at the time, half of the world’s
teak came from Burma (today’s Myanmar) and was used for furniture and small
wooden products.
Karl Holmburg, a
Carpenter, began making furniture in the early 1920s at Gotene in Vastra
Gotland, Sweden. He started by working
with his father Anders Johan Holmburg, also a Carpenter in the family business
that Dad began in 1903. They initially made exclusive designer furniture to
order for the larger furniture store such as Nordiska Kompaniet (NK) in Stockholm and Gothenburg. Anders died in
1927.
The company expanded slowly
over the next 30 years and by the early 1950s, they employed around 20
staff. At that time, they restructured
and production switched to teak products for the home, mainly kitchen items
such as trays and bowls.
Karl’s sons took over
the running of the company with elder son Karl-Eric in charge. In the 1960s, the company launched its own
teak cutlery series by which time they had around 100 staff and were Sweden’s
largest maker of teak products. This
couldn’t last and by the late 1960s, fashions had changed and despite attempts
to diversify, the company was bankrupt by 1973.
Teak had become much more widespread and commonplace by then.
It is odds-on that the tray was made by Karl’s company but it is likely that the ramekins themselves
were made by Rörstrand, now part of Iittala, having
moved their production to Sri Lanka and Hungary. In 1926 the company moved from Stockholm to Gothenburg and again from
Gothenburg to larger premises at Lidköping in 1936. In 1983 Rörstrand was
bought by Arabia and in 1987 they merged with Gustavsbergs Porslinfabrik. In 1990 Rorstrand were taken over by the
Finnish Hackman Group. Between 1960 and 1990 Rörstrand had several owners,
including Uppsala-Ekeby, Finnish Wärtsilä and Hackman and Gustavsberg . Check out my post for them for more
information.
Iittala is a design company from
Finland that specializes in housewares. In
December 2005 their factory in Lidköping closed, ending almost 280 years of
local manufacture. The former porcelain factory is now the Rörstrand Centre
containing a museum, restaurant, art gallery and outlet store. The museum contains one of the best
collections of porcelain in Europe.
I should point out that none of the Rörstrand
ceramic designs are in any way similar to these ramekins and to further confuse
things, as mentioned earlier, they were taken over by Upsala-Ekeby in
1964. (Uppsala-Ekeby began manufacturing
porcelain in Uppsala in the 1960s because of increasing sales.) There are some
similarities in colour and design with a few of the Uppsala-Ekeby products.
The products had
various burned stamps, stickers and labels over the life of the company. They are marked “Karl Holmburg AB Akta Teak
Gotene Sweden” or “Karl Holmburg AB Genuine teak Gotene Sweden”. The branded ones also have a number that may
be a model and/or size designation. There is a label with the ramekins written
in Swedish. (Not one of my
languages, but here goes; - )
“Your beautiful ramekins and beautiful Bangkok teak tray will become more beautiful if they are used properly. Do not expose the ramekins to high heat and never put them in a dishwasher. Clean after use, by washing or wiping off with lukewarm water and immediately drying on a towel. They should be seasoned with cooking oil or paraffin oil occasionally.”