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Marcrest Daisy Dot Stoneware Vintage 50s-60s Mar-crest

by: outofthebluegrass( 852Feedback score is 500 to 999) Top 5000 Reviewer
85 out of 91 people found this guide helpful.
Guide viewed: 10772 times Tags: Marcrest | Western Stoneware | Monmouth | Daisy Dot | vintage dishes


Mar-crest Daisy & Dot Stoneware

    

(Rare round Marcrest pitcher, scalloped edge Marcrest daisy and dot serving platter)

Hull and McCoy are probably the best remembered of vintage 1950s - 60s pottery kitchenware. But there was also a line of dinnerware many of us still fondly remember and now collect called Mar-crest. That deep dark chocolate colored warm Colorado brown glazed pottery that graced kitchen and picnic tables decades ago. Memories of mom's and grandma's homemade potato, macaroni or green bean salad, baked beans, peas and carrots, mashed potatoes and corn ... all baked and served in Old Fashioned Marcrest Oven Proof Stoneware. Can you think of anything better to drink hot chocolate or Ovaltine from on those chilly fall and winter days than a large Marcrest stein? I use mine year round. :-)

Quiz #1. What are the correct names of the daisy and dot items below? Answers are at the bottom of the page. This is the easier of the 2 quizzes in this guide.  :-)

Collectors refer to the pattern as daisy and dot (not daisy and button, which is a glassware pattern). The motif (style) is known as Pennsylvania Dutch. (Many non-Mar-crest items also have a Pennsylvania motif: aprons, tablecloths, cross stitch designs, cooking style, decoration style, etc.) Mar-crest is often described as having wavy, scalloped lines, dots and flowery or starfish designs. There were stacking mixing bowls, cups, saucers, plates, dutch ovens, casseroles and divided vegetable dishes. Cereal bowls, berry bowls and French handled soup bowls. Carafes, pitchers, lazy susans, mini bean pots, grease pots, salt and pepper shakers, cream and sugar bowls, pie plates, cookie jars, snack plates, chop plates, oval platters, etc. Many were produced in different sizes, styles and colors. Pictured below are some of my Marcrest cookie jars: 

(Will add new picture here of cj collection when eBay picture glitch is fixed.)

Recently, we're seeing more rare Marcrest pieces on eBay. Relish trays, square or frosted items, scalloped edge serving platter, 2 piece or 5 piece snack sets, round barrel shaped pitchers, batter bowls, pastel items and pieces with pastel interiors (such as mini bean pots, cream pitchers and a rare soup tureen with pink interior ). Original boxes also turn up from time to time.

Quiz #2. Tougher quiz of the 2. What are the correct names of the daisy dot items below? Answers are at the bottom of this page. Good luck!  :-)

 

Mar-crest auctions are sometimes mistakenly put in the Hull category or are listed as being produced by Hull. I believe the vast majority of Marcrest was produced by Western Stoneware in Monmouth, Illinois, and that only a small percentage of Marcrest pieces were actually produced by Hull: the banded ball pitcher, tea pot, pastel mugs, pastel tumblers, pastel cups, apricot and cream chip and dip (pictured below), its matching ashtray and 2 other ashtrays.

The best place on eBay to list or find Marcrest stoneware is in the Monmouth / Marcrest / Western SW category. That's where you'll find me most of the time. Lurking and hoping to add to my own Marcrest collection. Btw, whether you spell it Mar-crest or Marcrest, both are correct. The original boxes say Mar-crest, and the pottery bottoms are incised Mar-crest too. ;-)

Quiz #1 answers:

  • Row 1: Party mug aka German beer stein (18 oz) * Jumbo cookie jar
  • Row 2: Lazy susan (2 piece) * Divided vegetable dish, large (54 oz)

Quiz #2 answers:

  • Row 1: Grease pot (20 oz) with cover * Bean pot (half gallon) with cover
  • Row 2: Dutch oven (72 ounce) with cover * Casserole (48 ounce) with cover
  • Row 3: Individual size French handled soup aka casserole dish (10 oz) * French handled casserole dishes with covers in both sizes (40 and 54 ounce)

Above: Small dutch oven (aka deep pie dish w/ cover) and a large covered dutch oven.

Mar-crest mixing bowls have finished rims. When you see a piece with an unglazed rim, you'll know that a lid belongs with that piece, and that it's not a mixing bowl. (Exception being the small individual handled casserole dish with cover.) See my About Me page to read more about Mar-crest. Happy collecting!

(Hull Mar-crest pastel teapots, cups and matching ball pitchers above.)

OutOfTheBluegrass

Copyright 2006 - 2009 Rita Beavin Pence

(... and Murphy, too.)


Guide ID: 10000000001889427Guide created: 09/20/06 (updated 10/28/09)

 
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