Bright cut spoon- made by roden?
Posted: Fri Jul 27, 2018 12:16 pm
Hi, this is my first time posting, so hopefully I'm doing everything correctly!
I picked up this spoon at a thrift store and am trying to figure it out. I don't know much (anything) about silver, but the brightcut design looked similar to a few older English pieces my mom has collected, so I took a gamble that she would like it.
The marks on the back look like Roden, and the overall shape of the spoon looks like their Old English pattern, but then the ornamentation throws a monkey wrench in the whole business.
Most of the Rodden patterns I've looked at seem to have quite a different aesthetic. The decoration also seems a bit off: not as even/straight/centered as I would expect. I wondered if anyone with more experience can shed some light on whether this is a Roden design/typical of their quality. Is it possible that the decorations were done independently, ie as a practice piece for a jeweler, or have I misidentified the maker? I appreciate any advice!


I picked up this spoon at a thrift store and am trying to figure it out. I don't know much (anything) about silver, but the brightcut design looked similar to a few older English pieces my mom has collected, so I took a gamble that she would like it.
The marks on the back look like Roden, and the overall shape of the spoon looks like their Old English pattern, but then the ornamentation throws a monkey wrench in the whole business.
Most of the Rodden patterns I've looked at seem to have quite a different aesthetic. The decoration also seems a bit off: not as even/straight/centered as I would expect. I wondered if anyone with more experience can shed some light on whether this is a Roden design/typical of their quality. Is it possible that the decorations were done independently, ie as a practice piece for a jeweler, or have I misidentified the maker? I appreciate any advice!

