Consult The Clarice Doctor HERE
Consult The Clarice Doctor HERE
The Clarion - Members News
The Clarion - Members News
The Clarice Cliff Collectors Club - Founded in 1982. Celebrated 25 years in 2007!
Buy and sell your Clarice Cliff items HERE
Buy and sell your Clarice Cliff items HERE
Clarice Chat - The Open Forum
Clarice Chat - The Open Forum
The Clarice Cliff Collectors Club.
Frequently Asked Questions (F.A.Qs)
about Clarice Cliff Pottery
Since the 12th October 1998 when ClariceCliff.com was launched, the ‘Doc’ has answered questions from visitors to our website: many thousands of them! 
 
As a general 'Rule of Thumb', unless a piece has one of these words in the backstamp:

Bizarre, Fantasque, Inspiration, Latona, Appliqué

It is unlikely to be of any great value.
 
TABLE & DINNER WARES ~
Many enquiries are about simple, traditional tableware, plates or dinner sets, with a green or black backstamp saying either -

Clarice Cliff
Newport Pottery

or 
Royal Staffordshire Ceramics/Dinnerware by
Clarice Cliff 
This Ware is post- War, (or sometimes from 1937 to 1941) and not very collectable and hence of low value.
Some people seem intent to prove their piece is rare and has to be valuable, or that they got a ‘bargain’.
Clarice Cliff 1940s Backstamp.
Royal Staffordshire Ceramics Backstamp
We have had to disillusion rather a lot along the way, but here to commemorate more than four years of the ‘Doc’ is a selection of Questions and Answers!
 
THE LILY AND SWAN SHAPED PLANTERS ~
Question:-
"I have a bowl shaped like a Water lily and have not managed to see one like it anywhere. I suspect it may be valuable, can you help?"
Shape 973 Lily Planter
Shape 973 Lily Planter
Shape 973 'Lily' Planter
Answer:-
The Water lily bowl (shape 973) was part of a series of ware; this piece was designed to hold spring bulbs in peat. The range was issued in 1938 but produced until the late fifties, and over 250,000 were sold, many to Australia or New Zealand, so it’s common and can often be found for less than £100. There are a few colour variants known and also a similar planter in the shape of a Swan.
THE JAMPOT LID ISSUE..! ~
Question:-
"I have bought a Clarice Cliff 1930s Jampot from a local dealer, who assures me the EPNS lid he sold it with is original; can you please confirm this?" 
1930s CC Jampot
1930s CC Jampot
1930s CC Jampot
Answer:-
No, we can confirm that without exception the Drum shape jampots (and Beehive) were never issued with EPNS lids. There are MANY lidless jampots, as everyone is looking for replacement lids, As you have found some dealers will say anything to get a sale! Some of the very early 'Original Bizarre' Jampots do have a fitted EPNS lid, but only the very early (late 1920s) pieces are like this.
THE 'FAKES' & RARITY ISSUE ~
Question:-
"I bought a Clarice Cliff plate in the Clovelly pattern for £30 at a car boot recently, and believe it is rather rare as the banding is gold and blue fine lines around the rim. IS it worth more because of this?" 
Clarice Cliff 'Fake' plate.

Read more about Clarice Cliff Fakes
and how to spot them HERE

Answer:-
This is a functional dinner plate with a banded rim and plain centre, the pattern was added recently to deceive. As the banding is partly in gold we are certain of this. This was also done on plates with broad edge banding in colours that matched the central design they added. These were on the market a few years back. So the plate IS a Clarice Cliff one, with an original backstamp, but we are afraid it is worthless. It is illegal to sell it as it has a registered trademark. If you can trace the vendor report them to your local Trading Standards. Buyer beware!
CLARICE CLIFF TOBY JUGS ~
Question:-
"I think I have found something rare! It is Toby jug but by Clarice Cliff, surely she only did Art Deco?"
Clarice Cliff Toby Jugs
Answer:-
This traditional Toby jug shape was made for both Shorter and Sons and Wilkinson's simultaneously from before the War. Being decorated underglaze, and made in large quantities, this shape probably continued to be made from 1946 to the middle the fifties. There are at least three sizes, they are not rare, are worth around £50 to £130, although they may be worth more to a 'Toby' collector.
Clarice Cliff Toby Jugs
POTTERY BY CLARICE'S FACTORY WORKERS ~
Question:-
"I have a plate with an unusual mark for the paintress Gladys Scarlett and believe she was connected with Clarice Cliff? Is it valuable?"
Royal Venton Backstamp - Not Clarice Cliff
Answer:-
Your plate was produced by the Steventon factory in Stoke where Gladys Scarlett worked briefly as designer after she left Clarice Cliff where she was the first worker in the Bizarre 'shop'. Economic conditions meant she was only a designer briefly, and in later years she forgotten this part of her life. It is a simple tableware design so interesting as she worked with Clarice Cliff, but is of low value.
GOLD BACKSTAMPS ~
Question:-
"I have heard that gold backstamps were only used briefly in the late 20’s by Clarice Cliff but a friend has an extensive Crocus set with gold marks, can you explain?"
Gold Clarice Cliff Backstamp
Late 1920s gold backstamp
Answer:-
'Gold' coloured backstamps were used briefly in 1928, but dropped as they were not durable. They were then used extensively from 1948 to 1958, as on your friend’s pieces.
'Budgerigar' Wares ~
Question:-
"I have inherited some Clarice Cliff items with Budgies on the side. Are they valuable - can you tell me any more about them?"
Clarice Cliff Budgerigar Ware
Answer:-
Clarice Cliff issued a whole series of these 'Budgerigar' or 'Love Bird' wares in the late 1930s (1937 - 1939). The items have a ribbed body, matt glaze and two birds on a branch, which is wrapped around the item. They were fairly successful when available and are still quite common today. Most items in the range sell for under £150.
1930s POTTERY 'IN THE STYLE' OF CLARICE CLIFF ~
Question:-
"I have a jug with a hand-painted mark 'Constance Cliff Hand Painted Westport Pottery', is it valuable, and is she connected with Clarice Cliff?"
Answer:-
Clarice Cliff was phenomenally successful in the 30’s, to the extent that many factories in Stoke-on-Trent tried to emulate her shapes or patterns. In this case a factory decorated very old (pre 1920) shapes of unsaleable ware with simple hand painted blocks of colour; the quality was inferior to Bizarre ware. It did not affect the market then, and is not of much interest to collectors now.

Enquiries are of course welcome, but please allow 24 to 72 hours for a reply.

Please CLICK HERE to submit your own 'Clarice Doctor' information request.

Your Webmaster ( and just one of the many ‘Doc’s ) ~

Andrew Hutton
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