The Fortune Cup
From Mystic Tea Room
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[[File:Johnson-Fortune-Cup-Interior.jpg|thumb|300px|right|The Fortune Cup, copyright 1965 Verna A. and John W. Meredith, Snowhite Regency [[:Category:Made in England|Made in England]] by [[:Category:Johnson Brothers|Johnson Brothers]] Ironstone; interior view view]] | [[File:Johnson-Fortune-Cup-Interior.jpg|thumb|300px|right|The Fortune Cup, copyright 1965 Verna A. and John W. Meredith, Snowhite Regency [[:Category:Made in England|Made in England]] by [[:Category:Johnson Brothers|Johnson Brothers]] Ironstone; interior view view]] | ||
[[File:Johnson-Fortune-Cup-Center-1965.jpg|thumb|300px|right|The Fortune Cup, center of the cup, showing the handwritten copyright notice "1965 Verna A. and John W. Meredith," in the glaze]] | [[File:Johnson-Fortune-Cup-Center-1965.jpg|thumb|300px|right|The Fortune Cup, center of the cup, showing the handwritten copyright notice "1965 Verna A. and John W. Meredith," in the glaze]] | ||
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[[File:Johnson-Fortune-Cup-Backstamp.jpg|thumb|300px|right||The Fortune Cup, backstamp, Snowhite Regency [[:Category:Made in England|Made in England]] by [[:Category:Johnson Brothers|Johnson Brothers]] Ironstone]] | [[File:Johnson-Fortune-Cup-Backstamp.jpg|thumb|300px|right||The Fortune Cup, backstamp, Snowhite Regency [[:Category:Made in England|Made in England]] by [[:Category:Johnson Brothers|Johnson Brothers]] Ironstone]] | ||
+ | [[File:Verna-A-Meredith-John-W-Meredith-The-Fortune-Cup-Copyright-May-12-1965.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Caption]] | ||
The Fortune Cup is the somewhat generic name given to a rare [[:Category:Cartomancy Cups and Saucers|cartomancy cup and saucer set]] created by Verna A. Meredith and John W. Meredith, which bears a copyright date of 1965. It was [[:Category:Made in England|manufactured in England]] for the Merediths by the large [[:Category:Johnson Brothers|Johnson Brothers]] pottery on their popular 1960 Snowhite Regncy swirl shape, and was probably decorated in one of the company's plants in America or Canada. | The Fortune Cup is the somewhat generic name given to a rare [[:Category:Cartomancy Cups and Saucers|cartomancy cup and saucer set]] created by Verna A. Meredith and John W. Meredith, which bears a copyright date of 1965. It was [[:Category:Made in England|manufactured in England]] for the Merediths by the large [[:Category:Johnson Brothers|Johnson Brothers]] pottery on their popular 1960 Snowhite Regncy swirl shape, and was probably decorated in one of the company's plants in America or Canada. | ||
- | I have not found any newspaper or magazine | + | I have not found any newspaper or magazine advertisements for The Fortune Cup by this husband and wife team, but they were definitely American, not British, because in 1965 they took out an American copyright on "The Fortune Cup" name and a drawing, which was subtitled "Cross of Playing Cards." The copyright notice reads as follows: |
:MEREDITH, JOHN W. <br> | :MEREDITH, JOHN W. <br> |
Revision as of 05:55, 23 December 2023
The Fortune Cup is the somewhat generic name given to a rare cartomancy cup and saucer set created by Verna A. Meredith and John W. Meredith, which bears a copyright date of 1965. It was manufactured in England for the Merediths by the large Johnson Brothers pottery on their popular 1960 Snowhite Regncy swirl shape, and was probably decorated in one of the company's plants in America or Canada.
I have not found any newspaper or magazine advertisements for The Fortune Cup by this husband and wife team, but they were definitely American, not British, because in 1965 they took out an American copyright on "The Fortune Cup" name and a drawing, which was subtitled "Cross of Playing Cards." The copyright notice reads as follows:
- MEREDITH, JOHN W.
- The fortune cup. See MEREDITH, VERNA A.
- MEREDITH, VERNA A.
- The fortune cup. [Cross of playing cards] Drawing. © Verna A. & John W. Meredith; 12 May 65; GU3863O.
The rarity of this set comes about because it was not a regular issuance from the [:Category:Johnson Brothers|Johnson Brothers]] pottery and was not marketed by them. Instead -- like the Zanzig's Zodiac shop cup, made by the Anchor Pottery; the Wimsatt Cup, made by the Canonsburg Pottery; and the XXX Romany cup, made by Cavitt-Shaw -- this was a custom job, designed by, and delivered to, a small home-based company -- in this case, Verna A. and John W. Meredith.
DIV-TLR-FOME
catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
The Mystic Tea Room