Skip to main content

Lusterware Tea Set

Recent Sales

Gold Lusterware Tea Set Czech Slovakia
By Victoria Czechoslovakia
Located in Pataskala, OH
6 piece set of gold lusterware tea set from Czech Slovakia. It includes the lidded sugar bowl
Category

Mid-20th Century Slovak Mid-Century Modern Tea Sets

Materials

Luster, Porcelain

Mid-Century Modern Lusterware Blue Teaset
By Victoria Czechoslovakia
Located in Pataskala, OH
Set include teapot, creamer, sugar bowl and two cups with underplates and small plates. The pale
Category

Mid-20th Century Slovak Mid-Century Modern Tea Sets

Materials

Porcelain

Vintage Porcelain Lusterware Cream and Sugar Set from Germany
Located in Pasadena, CA
Vintage porcelain lusterware seashell cream and sugar set from Germany.
Category

Vintage 1950s Tea Sets

1920s Japanese Porcelain Lusterware 22-Karat Gold Gilt Tea Set of 18 Pieces
Located in West Palm Beach, FL
yellow partial tea set. This 18 piece set includes, tea or coffee pot with lid, sugar bowl with lid
Category

Mid-20th Century Japanese Art Deco Tea Sets

Materials

Gold

Get Updated with New Arrivals
Save "Lusterware Tea Set", and we’ll notify you when there are new listings in this category.

Finding the Right Tea-sets for You

Ready to serve high tea and brunch for your family and friends? Start with the right antique, new or vintage tea set.

Tea is a multicultural, multinational beverage and isn’t confined to any particular lifestyle or age group. It has humble beginnings, and one of its best-known origin stories places the first cups of tea in 2700 B.C. in China, where it was recognized for its medicinal properties. Jump ahead to 17th-century England, when Chinese tea began to arrive at ports in London. During the early 1800s, tea became widely affordable, and the concept of teatime took shape all over England. Today, more than 150 million people reportedly drink tea daily in the United States.

Early tea drinkers enjoyed their beverage in a bowl, and English potters eventually added a handle to the porcelain bowls so that burning your fingers became less of a teatime hazard. With the rise in the popularity of teatime, tea sets, also referred to as tea service, became a hot commodity.

During Queen Victoria’s reign, teakettles and coffeepots were added to tea services that were quite large — indeed, small baked goods were served with your drink back then, and a tea set could include many teacups and saucers, a milk pot and other accessories.

During the early 1920s, a sterling-silver full tea service and tray designed by Tiffany Co. might include a hot-water kettle on a stand, a coffeepot, teapot, a creamer with a small lip spout, a waste bowl and a bowl for sugar, which the British were stirring into tea as early as the 18th century.

But you don’t have to limit your tea set to Victorian or Art Deco styles — shake up teatime with an artful contemporary service. If the bold porcelain cups and saucers by Italian brand Seletti are too unconventional for your otherwise subdued tea circle, find antique services on 1stDibs from Japan, France and other locales as well as vintage mid-century modern tea sets and neoclassical designs.