
Original: $108.65
-65%$108.65
$38.03The Story
A charming German fine porcelain trinket dish from master porcelain craft house KMP Berlin, featuring a striking black and white design. Perfect for holding jewellery, keys, or small treasures on a bedside table, desk, or shelf. Crafted from high quality porcelain and glaze.
Part of a range designed in 2003 by international superstar designer Tassilo von Grolman.
Diameter: 7.2cm
Height: 4cm
Meet the designer
Tassilo von Grolman has one philosophy that overrides all others, "Simple is the most difficult".
Every product, every design, every service is one-of-a-kind and has to be inimitable. This is our ambition in our work. We bring uniqueness to light. Design serves to attract attention and communicate a productâs essence in a way that is compelling, clear, and recognizable for the target group. This is indispensable for success.
âEverything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.â â Albert Einstein
Grolman's CV reads like a who's who of intrnational recognition. Museums worldwide from MoMA & Cooper Hewit in New York, to V&A in London to the Design Council in Moscow and not forgetting the East Frisian Tea Museum! Consultancies include NESTLĂ, MARLBORO & DEUTSCHE BANK.
About KPM Berlin
Frederick the Great founded the Royal Porcelain Manufactory in Berlin, 1763. He gives the manufactory its name and his symbol, the royal sceptre. During the 18th and 19th century KPM Berlin porcelain can be found on the tables of European royal houses and the Russian tsarist dynasty. High-ranking guests of the Federal President still dine from the Rocaille service at Bellevue Palace today.
During the Bauhaus era the age of sweeping ornamentation is over, less is more. Gerhard Marcks, Marguerite FriedlĂ€nder, Trude Petri and Siegmund SchĂŒtz, among others, leave their mark on porcelain design at the manufactory. Trude Petri's refined Urbino dinner service is created in 1929, based on the most perfect of all shapes: the sphere. URBINO was awarded the Grand Prix at the Paris World Exhibition in 1937 and is now a permanent exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
As the 1990's developed asymmetry and abstraction supersede the strict forms of the Bauhaus era. A collaboration with Italian designer Enzo Mari resulted in a series of slender vases with square stainless steel feet and the Berlin collection, which won the iF Design Award. Berlin, one of our favourite porcelain sets, was an early addition to our catalogue and we are proud to say is still available from The Home, Salts Mill.
Â

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.
Description
A charming German fine porcelain trinket dish from master porcelain craft house KMP Berlin, featuring a striking black and white design. Perfect for holding jewellery, keys, or small treasures on a bedside table, desk, or shelf. Crafted from high quality porcelain and glaze.
Part of a range designed in 2003 by international superstar designer Tassilo von Grolman.
Diameter: 7.2cm
Height: 4cm
Meet the designer
Tassilo von Grolman has one philosophy that overrides all others, "Simple is the most difficult".
Every product, every design, every service is one-of-a-kind and has to be inimitable. This is our ambition in our work. We bring uniqueness to light. Design serves to attract attention and communicate a productâs essence in a way that is compelling, clear, and recognizable for the target group. This is indispensable for success.
âEverything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.â â Albert Einstein
Grolman's CV reads like a who's who of intrnational recognition. Museums worldwide from MoMA & Cooper Hewit in New York, to V&A in London to the Design Council in Moscow and not forgetting the East Frisian Tea Museum! Consultancies include NESTLĂ, MARLBORO & DEUTSCHE BANK.
About KPM Berlin
Frederick the Great founded the Royal Porcelain Manufactory in Berlin, 1763. He gives the manufactory its name and his symbol, the royal sceptre. During the 18th and 19th century KPM Berlin porcelain can be found on the tables of European royal houses and the Russian tsarist dynasty. High-ranking guests of the Federal President still dine from the Rocaille service at Bellevue Palace today.
During the Bauhaus era the age of sweeping ornamentation is over, less is more. Gerhard Marcks, Marguerite FriedlĂ€nder, Trude Petri and Siegmund SchĂŒtz, among others, leave their mark on porcelain design at the manufactory. Trude Petri's refined Urbino dinner service is created in 1929, based on the most perfect of all shapes: the sphere. URBINO was awarded the Grand Prix at the Paris World Exhibition in 1937 and is now a permanent exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
As the 1990's developed asymmetry and abstraction supersede the strict forms of the Bauhaus era. A collaboration with Italian designer Enzo Mari resulted in a series of slender vases with square stainless steel feet and the Berlin collection, which won the iF Design Award. Berlin, one of our favourite porcelain sets, was an early addition to our catalogue and we are proud to say is still available from The Home, Salts Mill.
Â
























