Netherton Foundry

WhereShropshire, UK
WhatTin-lined copper cookware
Neil and Sue Curri...

Neil and Sue Currie founded Netherton Foundry in 2011 with a simple vision: to answer a call for keep-forever cookware. That’s why they chose the tinning process over stainless steel, as objects can be tinned until they're thousands of years old. Their modus operandi is products with provenance, which is why every pan, pot and tin is crafted by hand in South Shropshire – the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution and iron masters such as Abraham Darby. Craft stories begin with a cut disc of copper that’s polished, wiped by a fifth-generation tinner and spun in a 1920s press. No chemicals or glues are used; instead, extra virgin olive oil lubricates the machines while flax wadding is used to wipe them.

Neil and Sue Currie founded Netherton Foundry in 2011 with a simple vision: to answer a call for keep-forever cookware. That’s why they chose the tinning process over stainless steel, as objects can be tinned until they're thousands of years old. Their

Neil and Sue Currie founded Netherton Foundry in 2011 with a simple vision: to answer a call for keep-forever cookware. That’s why they chose the tinning process over stainless steel, as objects can be tinned until they're thousands of years old. Their modus operandi is products with provenance, which is why every pan, pot and tin is crafted by hand in South Shropshire – the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution and iron masters such as Abraham Darby. Craft stories begin with a cut disc of copper that’s polished, wiped by a fifth-generation tinner and spun in a 1920s press. No chemicals or glues are used; instead, extra virgin olive oil lubricates the machines while flax wadding is used to wipe them.

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6 products

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Netherton Foundry

Neil and Sue Currie founded Netherton Foundry in 2011 with a simple vision: to answer a call for keep-forever cookware. That’s why they chose the tinning process over stainless steel, as objects can be tinned until they're thousands of years old. Their modus operandi is products with provenance, which is why every pan, pot and tin is crafted by hand in South Shropshire – the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution and iron masters such as Abraham Darby. Craft stories begin with a cut disc of copper that’s polished, wiped by a fifth-generation tinner and spun in a 1920s press. No chemicals or glues are used; instead, extra virgin olive oil lubricates the machines while flax wadding is used to wipe them.