New Hall: Early English Hard-Paste & Bone China Porcelain
New Hall was an English porcelain factory operating in Shelton, Staffordshire, from 1781 to approximately 1835. It holds a unique place in ceramic history as the only English factory licensed to produce true hard-paste porcelain using Richard Champion's patent (originally from the Bristol factory). Around 1812, New Hall transitioned to bone china production. The factory is best known for its affordable, well-made teawares decorated with simple but appealing patterns, making it a practical choice for the Georgian middle class and a rewarding area for collectors today.
Identification & Marks
- Early period (1781-1812): Hard-paste porcelain, mostly unmarked; identified by paste type (cold, glassy feel), simple painted patterns numbered in the decoration
- Pattern numbers: New Hall used a sequential numbering system painted on bases; numbers up to about 1040 indicate hard-paste, higher numbers indicate bone china
- "New Hall" mark: A cursive "New Hall" mark within a double circle was used on bone china pieces from approximately 1812-1830
- "N" mark: An incised "N" appears on some early pieces but is not conclusive
- Paste characteristics: Hard-paste pieces have a grayish-white body with a slightly greenish translucency; bone china pieces are warmer and more ivory-toned
Types & Patterns
- Teawares: The primary output -- teapots, cups and saucers, slop bowls, creamers, sugar boxes, and tea caddies
- Pattern types: Simple floral sprigs, Chinese-influenced designs, bat-printed landscapes, and gilt-bordered patterns
- Boy-at-the-Window pattern: One of the most recognizable New Hall designs, featuring a chinoiserie scene
- Silver-shape teapots: Distinctive oval teapots with straight spouts imitating contemporary silver forms
- Dessert services: Less common than teawares but produced in the later bone china period
Auction Price Ranges
| Item | Low | Mid | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cup and saucer (common pattern) | $30 | $80 | $200 |
| Teapot (hard-paste, good pattern) | $100 | $300 | $800 |
| Tea caddy | $80 | $200 | $500 |
| Cream jug | $40 | $120 | $300 |
| Complete tea service (partial) | $300 | $800 | $2,500 |
| Rare pattern or unusual form | $150 | $500 | $1,500 |
Condition Factors
- Hard-paste pieces are prone to flaking enamel decoration; check pattern definition carefully
- Teapot spouts frequently chipped; repairs at the spout tip are common and reduce value by 25-40%
- Hairline cracks running from rim to base in cups are common and reduce value significantly
- Gilt decoration wears easily; traces of original gilding add value over plain versions of the same pattern
- Staining inside teapots from centuries of use is expected and not a significant deduction
Collecting Tips
- The New Hall pattern number system makes collecting systematic: reference books by David Holgate and Pat Preller document most patterns
- Hard-paste period pieces (pre-1812) are generally more desirable to serious collectors than later bone china
- Complete or near-complete tea services are rare and command strong premiums
- Some patterns are scarce and sought after -- chinoiserie scenes and unusual color combinations bring the highest prices
- New Hall is often confused with contemporary factories like Keeling, Wolfe, and other Staffordshire makers -- study the paste differences carefully