Puiforcat Normandie Silver-Plated Fish Serving Fork and Knife

$1,050

In stock and ready to ship. Please contact our Client Service team to enquire about purchasing this product.

Named not for the province itself, but for the legendary ocean liner that linked Le Havre to New York City, Puiforcat’s Normandie collection once adorned the dining rooms of the first-class suites aboard. With this silver-plated fish-serving fork and knife – handcrafted in Puiforcat’s Parisian workshop – you can evoke the glamour of a transatlantic voyage in the 1930s at your dinner table.

Product ID: 2202346008

View more from: Puiforcat / Serving cutlery / flatware

Named not for the province itself, but for the legendary ocean liner that linked Le Havre to New York City, Puiforcat’s Normandie collection once adorned the dining rooms of the first-class suites aboard. With this silver-plated fish-serving fork and knife – handcrafted in Puiforcat’s Parisian workshop – you can evoke the glamour of a transatlantic voyage in the 1930s at your dinner table.

Product ID: 2202346008

View more from: Puiforcat / Serving cutlery / flatware

Puiforcat Normandie Silver-Plated Fish Serving Fork and Knife

$1,050

In stock and ready to ship. Please contact our Client Service team to enquire about purchasing this product.

Meet the Maker:

Puiforcat

Behind Puiforcat’s grand present belies a modest past; in 1820, brothers Émile and Joseph-Marie Puiforcat joined forces with their cousin, Jean-Baptiste Fuchs, to open a cutlery shop in the 3rd arrondissement of Paris. Fast forward to 1902 and Louis-Victor Tabouret – the husband of Laure Puiforcat – assumed the helm, taking it from humble storefront to high-flying silversmith. Under his influence, dining rooms shone with sterling silver, capturing the history and glory of art de la table a la française. During the 1920s, creative control passed through Jean Puiforcat’s hands – the visionary behind collections with an Art Deco persuasion – before Hermès’ acquisition in 1993. Sterling silver is of the highest grade, which craftspeople in the Pantin-based workshop hammer, planish, spin, chase and engrave to reach the final, museum-worthy results.