Puiforcat Normandie Silver-Plated Jam Pot with Spoon

US$585

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 jam pot and spoon – handcrafted in Puiforcat’s Parisian workshop – you can evoke the glamour of a transatlantic voyage in the 1930s at your breakfast table.

Product ID: 4405346002

View more from: Puiforcat / Sauces & condiments

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 jam pot and spoon – handcrafted in Puiforcat’s Parisian workshop – you can evoke the glamour of a transatlantic voyage in the 1930s at your breakfast table.

Product ID: 4405346002

View more from: Puiforcat / Sauces & condiments

Puiforcat Normandie Silver-Plated Jam Pot with Spoon

US$585

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

More from Sauces & Condiments

Meet the Maker:

Puiforcat

Across more than two centuries, Puiforcat’s expert artisans have replicated, refined and reinvented the craft of silver flatware and functional home objets, and the maison’s Parisian workshop is where it all happens. Behind closed doors, a variety of silversmithing, adornment and finishing techniques are employed to create the polished pieces, including signatures unique to Puiforcat. These include an age-old hand-hammering process known as planishing, spinning silver on a lathe to shape rounded objects, brazing to add functional or aesthetic accoutrements, chasing and etching to decorate, and a multi-stage buffing procedure that creates a mirror-like finish. Under Jean Puiforcat’s early 20th-century tenure, Puiforcat underwent an Art Deco metamorphosis, and many prototypes from that era endure today. Constructing these geometric designs requires its own cache of techniques, like the ratchet method to form stepped decoration and the classical goldsmithing tactics that produce facets.