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Good quality tableware
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markalanious
Posts: 82 Forumite
Hi All,
I'm after some good quality durable (won't chip in most clashes with it's family) tableware - preferably in sets as paying per plate etc frustrates me!
I like the proper Denby stuff (i.e. not the 'everyday' or 'intro' ranges) - it would win a fight against the kitchen tiles, but the price is ridiculous (in my opinion). I'm looking for something just as good but for half the price if such a thing exists.
Help?!
I'm after some good quality durable (won't chip in most clashes with it's family) tableware - preferably in sets as paying per plate etc frustrates me!
I like the proper Denby stuff (i.e. not the 'everyday' or 'intro' ranges) - it would win a fight against the kitchen tiles, but the price is ridiculous (in my opinion). I'm looking for something just as good but for half the price if such a thing exists.
Help?!
0
Comments
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here was me thinking this would be an easy answer!
"we've got some Joe Bloggs Tableware, from so and so, cost £80 but it's solid and modern looking"
Anyone?0 -
markalanious wrote: »Hi All,
I'm after some good quality durable (won't chip in most clashes with it's family) tableware - preferably in sets as paying per plate etc frustrates me!
I like the proper Denby stuff (i.e. not the 'everyday' or 'intro' ranges) - it would win a fight against the kitchen tiles, but the price is ridiculous (in my opinion). I'm looking for something just as good but for half the price if such a thing exists.
Help?!
I agree that proper Denby would win a fight against the kitchen tiles and to be honest if there was an alternative that is as strong but for half of the price we would all be buying it.
I don't really think you are going to get a cheap durable Denby quality dinner set in my opinion.I’m a Senior Forum Ambassador and I support the Forum Team on Competitions Time, Shopping & Freebies boards, Employment, Jobseeking & Training boards If you need any help on these boards, do let me know. Please note that Ambassadors are not moderators. Any posts you spot in breach of the Forum Rules should be reported via the report button, or by emailing forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com. All views are my own and not the official line of MoneySavingExpert.0 -
Thanks Sarah, and I agree. I guess what I mean is it can't be great quality like denby - then a massive drop in quality all the way down to the stuff you'd pick up from Argos - they're must be a scale of quality.
Maybe it's as durable, but not as pretty - that sort of thing?!0 -
Is there a Denby factory shop near you?
http://www.denby.co.uk/pcat/factory_shops
They often do BOGOF offers.
I have had Denby for over 20 years - before then I was young and liked to change themes every now and again. Now I've just got two designs and use one for formal dining and the other for everyday use.
I have been tempted recently to buy a new set but the quality of the new stuff has put me off. I was going to get the Halo design a couple of years ago but everytime I went into a store they had some chips on items which indicated to me that they weren't up to normal standards.
I'd recommend a factory shop for an earlier design or you can get some good used sets on ebay.
I have no issues with second hand crockery; after all, how many people have eaten from restaurant plates over their lifetime?:hello:0 -
All my tableware is antique or at least very old simply because of the beauty and quality of it..........and picked up for tiny amounts at auctions and charity shops.
New 'anything' is generally of poorer workmanship than of old; they really don't make 'em like they used to, and that includes furniture, clothes, leather goods, flatware, lighting......unless of course you spend a fortune.
I'm currently using a 1900's blue and white Staffordshire dinner service which cost me around £15 from a local auction and from which a side plate recently survived a drop onto flagstones."I'm ready for my close-up Mr. DeMille...."0 -
This is a great collection:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/DENBY-STONEWARE-CAMELOT-SET-PLATES-SAUCERS-POTS-BUTTER-DISH-JUGS-AND-MORE-/251831594219?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_3&hash=item3aa2552ceb
and so is this:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/221688221635?_trksid=p2060778.m1438.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT
My Imperial Blue set is 20+ years old and still going strong.:hello:0 -
thanks Tiddlywinks - the second hand ebay idea never crossed my mind but I'm tempted - just need the right set to come up somewhere within driving distance.0
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+1 for ebay collection only clearance opportunities.
Also register with Denby as a customer & establish which patterns you're interested in. We run Imperial Blue & they do have 50% off firsts (then UK P&P usually around £6 but you get a LOT of bubblewrap with that!)
Keep an eye out for department store opening (or the like) special offers? I started my hope chest of Denby when a store had 20% off everything & another 10% on top of that if you paid by store card. Their china department & I were on first name terms for several months as items were delivered to store (which dates things a bit).
Short term, find one or two denby plates you like & ruthlessly tour charity shops looking for "more like this" (I added "to replace the rest I dropped on a genuinely stone floor"). Build up a 'harlequin' set of robust & lovely Denby at under £2 an item and put the same money aside to buy seconds or whatever you can from the outlet malls. Plates, bowls mugs - they need not match at first, just survive. The money on not buying matching firsts can be squirrelled to spend when the special discounts come through!
Enjoy & good luck!0 -
I agree about the factory shop (eg Junc 27 M1), if you don't mind some minor imperfections in the patterns. Our Azure cost a fraction. Not sure it'd survive the kitchen floor though.0
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