STOKE-ON-TRENT, United Kingdom — In his ceramics workshop, Simon Willis proudly
displays the crockery set he has created for
Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum
Jubilee, dreaming it will end up in the monarch’s personal collection.
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“It’s an event which won’t ever happen again, we
won’t have the chance of seeing another queen or king on the throne for 70
years. So it’s a big deal,” he told AFP.
Willis is the owner of Goviers in Stoke-on-Trent,
central
England, which has specialized in making commemorative ceramics for
more than 30 years.
Elizabeth became queen on February 6, 1952, and June
will be the focal point of public celebrations to mark her unprecedented
70-year reign.
To celebrate the occasion, Goviers has been selling
a “Platinum Jubilee” range of cups and plates with traditionally English floral
designs since last July.
The work is meticulous, with each colored pattern in
the motif individually printed onto a transfer and applied by hand on the fine
porcelain cups and plates.
A ceramist brushes the final golden touches to the
piece, which is then fired to make it ready for sale.
From the rough cup to the final dabs of paint,
everything is made in Stoke-on-Trent, which is also known as The Potteries.
The city has been
renowned for its pottery for centuries, taking advantage of local clay for
making the ceramics and coal deposits for firing them.
It became the world’s center of pottery production
in around 1800, prospering for decades before going into sharp decline, with
factories closing and relocating to
Asia.
‘Very English tradition’
“A lot of the manufacturing
has gone abroad,” due to cost of production, said the 58-year-old owner.
But those factories don’t produce jubilee pieces
because “they see the market is not big enough for them”, he added.
A finished Platinum Jubilee Commemorative Limited Edition Loving Cup for Goviers, as part of their Royal Commemoratives collection, in Stoke-on-Trent, central England, on March 24, 2022.
Willis stumbled into the ceramics industry after
studying economics, specializing in the auto industry.
Given most of his customer are collectors from
Britain, he had no hesitation in creating a new jubilee line.
“They’ve probably got plates to celebrate the
queen’s marriage, or the coronation, all these other events,” he said of his
clientele.
“They are just a tradition, I suppose, that is very
English.”
Selling for between £45 for a small cup and £175 for
a large plate, Goviers crockery is not intended to be used as a mere kitchen
utensil.
Instead it is meant to be displayed alongside other
commemorative ceramics.
“The British ceramics industry has always been good
at marking those occasions, big or small,” said Willis.
“The great thing
about ceramics is that ... whatever is produced today, if it’s looked after
will still be around when my son is probably gone.
“We’re producing something that is intrinsically
there forever,” he added.
Economic benefits
Souvenirs dedicated to the
popular queen, who turns 96 next month, and the wider royal family are
typically rolled out to mark every birth, wedding and celebration.
Such souvenirs generated almost £200 million in
revenue during the Diamond Jubilee in 2012, with five million commemorative
cups and ceramics sold, according to the UK’s Centre for Retail Trade.
Four days of public festivities are planned for
early June, including a military parade, a large concert, and thousands of
street parties around the country.
Despite
Brexit and the pandemic, tourists are
expected in their droves.
Goviers expects to sell only a few hundred cups and
plates, but its boss hopes his tableware will be remembered.
“It is a little bit special doing something that is
associated with a royal event, a big event... for an occasion which has been
celebrated all over the world,” said Willis.
He is particularly keen to impress one potential
customer.
“We do know that the queen obviously has a massive
collection of ceramics. But a couple of things that we’ve done, they may well
get into the hands of Her Majesty,” he added.
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