A sterling silver 'Acanthus' pattern flatware service, designed…
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A sterling silver 'acanthus' pattern flatware service, designed by Johan Rohde for Georg Jensen in 1917, post-1945 production, comprising: twelve dinner knives, twelve dinner forks, twelve dessert spoons, twelve lunch knives, twelve lunch forks, twelve soup spoons, six grapefruit spoons, six cake forks, six teaspoons, one strainer, one corkscrew and two mustard pots with spoons, each stamped Georg Jensen sterling Denmark, 3080 grams total weight silver excluding knives with steel blades and corkscrew

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  • Acanthus - A stylized leaf motif, one of the primary decorative elements of classical Greek and Roman architecture, derived from the genus of flowering plants in the family Acanthaceae, native to tropical and subtropical regions of the Mediterranean area. It is a common element in classical Greek and Roman design, and is often seen in Corinthian and Composite order columns and used as a decorative element in English, European and Australian furniture, particularly on the curve of a leg, and as decoration for a corbel.
  • Sterling Silver - Sterling silver is a mixture of 92.5% pure silver and 7.5% of another metal, usually copper. Fine silver is 99.9% pure silver, and is relatively soft and the addition of the very small amount of copper gives the metal enough strength and hardness to be worked into jewellery, decorative and household objects.
  • Flatware - An alternative name for items of cutlery, principally knives, forks and spoons, now generally used to describe sets of these implements. Nowadays it is mostly used when describing cutlery made of silver and silver plate.

    It is less frequently used to describe all "flat' items of tableware, so that as well as cutlery the definition includes plates.

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