This is a Franciscan China 6 3/8" bread plate in the ARCADIA GREEN pattern, featuring green and gold plumes circling the edge with gold accents. This pattern was produced from 1942-1962 and was made in California, course, during the boom years of California pottery production which began before WWII and lasted until the US govt began to allow cheap imports from China, Japan, and Taiwan in the 1960's. California potteries provided an excellent source of jobs during WWII as MOST of the supplies they needed were not rationed. Imported china sets from England and Europe became hard to get for obvious reasons during the war. People were looking for bright and fancy things and California came through!

I have four of these plates. Quantity discount and only $1 added shipping for each additional plate.

Condition:
Little to no utensil marks on any of them! From a casual observation they all look great! None of them have any blemishes or scratches to the main pattern or the fine pin-stripe in the middle. Those thin pin-stripes often get worn so these look better than expected for their age on that account. The other gold accent on the edges do so some very MINOR wear in places--still less than would be expected from age. These are not easily noticed under casual observation--your guests at your dinner party will not see these plates as looking worn, used, or tired. I have my glasses on and look at their pieces under a bright light to do a condition report. There is ALWAYS something to report so beware of listings that do not provide any details!

Overall. these look great! Ready to shine on your table!!


How I Assess Vintage Pieces
Please note that my written descriptions are not AI-generated! These are written by a human physically looking at the actual piece.

My listings are more than just a one line list of the dimensions. I strive to identify all flaws—even minor ones—in the listing, with both photos and descriptions. This means you know what you are getting from me. Vintage items typically have light signs of usage: utensil marks, diminished shine to the glaze, scratches on the design, chips, crazing, and cracks. The situations mentioned above are exactly what I examine each item for, under a bright light and with glasses on, as I am listing it.

I don’t use the word “excellent” unless there is no crazing, no cracks, no chips, zero utensil marks, and no muting of colors or glaze sheen…so I rarely use the word “excellent” for a vintage item.

Problems:
In the event of a problem, please contact me asap. I want you to be happy with your purchase!

Returns:
Returns accepted within 30 days of purchase. Buyer pays return postage. No refund will be given if item arrives broken or damaged, so please pack returns very carefully.

Feedback
I leave feedback within a week after your item is received. If you are considering leaving neutral or negative feedback, please contact me first! I appreciate the chance to make things right. If you check out my feedback, you will see I do not often disappoint.

Looking for Other Vintage Mid Century Modern Items?
WAXWING MID MOD may be able to help!

Let me know what you are after. At any given moment I have 100+ items not listed yet! I focus on mid-century modern plate sets, serving pieces, barware, glassware, stemware, vases, and art. You can find me under AstridWaxwing09 on various platforms.

I love reuniting orphan glassware with its pattern family! Franciscan, Noritake, Lenox, Stangl, Salem, California potteries, Dorothy Thorpe, McCoy, Hazel Atlas, Fire King, Anchor Hocking, Pyrex, and Corning Ware/Corelle are some of the brands I seek out and educate myself about.

I’m drawn to kitchenware because kitchen is the heart of the home. The ritual of choosing a plate pattern when getting married is one of the first choices an engaged couple makes together. This is when they decide what image of “successful adulthood” they want to portray to their friends and family. Often the bride had more control over these choices—but so much less control about most everything else. Women are still fighting for control over their lives, bodies, education, and destiny.

It may seem odd to look backwards at dishes and bowls from the 1920’s-1970’s to be inspired about women’s rights but I am aware on a daily basis that any opportunity or privilege I have today was made possible by women who came before me—intelligent women like my mother who may have not been legally able to have her own checking account or attend certain universities, but still took action to shape a better future.

22023K.15o