Blue Bretby bowl (mark)
Blue Bretby jug
Blue Bretby jug (mark)
Blue Bretby vase
Blue Bretby vase (mark)
Bretby bottle
Bretby bottle (mark)
Bretby bowl
Bretby bowl (mark)
Bretby bronze cloisonne vases
Bretby bronze cloisonne vases (marks)
Bretby Clanta vase
Bretby Clanta vase (mark)
Bretby Delhi Ware vase
Bretby Delhi Ware vase (mark)
Bretby dimpled bowl
Bretby dimpled bowl (mark)
Bretby hanging pot
Bretby hanging pot (mark)
Bretby jug
Bretby jug (mark)
Bretby oriental jar
Bretby oriental jar (mark)
Bretby oriental vase
Bretby oriental vase (mark)
Bretby pot
Bretby vase
Bretby vase (mark)
Bretby wall plate (mark)
Bretby wall plate - 1
Bretby wall plate - 2
Brown Bretby vase
Pair of Clanta vases
Pair of Clanta vases (mark)
Small Bretby jardinière
Small Bretby jardinière (mark)
Tall Bretby flown glaze vase
Tall Bretby flown glaze vase (mark)
Three-handled Bretby vase
White Bretby vase
White Bretby vase (mark)
Bretby Art Pottery, more properly known as Tooth & Co. Ltd., was started in 1883 by Henry Tooth and William Ault. Ault left after four years to set up his own pottery at Swadlincote.
The company produced both inexpensive pressed wares and more costly thrown art pottery. Bretby stayed in the hands of the Tooth family until 1933, and after the second World War became known as Tooth and Company Limited Bretby Art Pottery.
Marks include the familiar rising sun over the name BRETBY, a stylized HT for Henry Tooth, and the brand names Clanta and Clanta Ware.
Further Reading: |
Bretby Art Pottery by Michael David Ash | |
British Ceramic Art: 1870-1940 by John A Bartlett |