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Pride

Place Setting, "Pride"
1953 (designed), 1959 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

David Mellor (1930-2009) trained as a silversmith at Sheffield College of Art (1946–8) and the Royal College of Art (1950–54). In 1954 he established a silversmithing workshop and studio in Sheffield and became a design consultant to the firm of Walker & Hall. It manufactured his earliest designs, including the ‘Pride’ range of electroplated silver cutlery (1953), the simple and elegant forms of which were inspired by 18th-century English cutlery. This was the first in a series of cutlery designs, for which he is best known (examples London, V&A; Goldsmiths’ Co.) and which received numerous Design Centre awards. In 1962 he became a Royal Designer for Industry. In 1963 the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works commissioned from him a range of silver cutlery and tableware for use in British embassies and in 1965 the minimalist ‘Thrift’ range of stainless steel cutlery, to be manufactured at low cost and used in government institutions. In 1975 he began to manufacture his own cutlery at Broom Hall, Sheffield, using innovative, highly mechanized methods; in 1988 production was transferred to a purpose-built factory, designed by Michael Hopkins (b 1935), at Hathersage, Derbys. Although Mellor concentrated on industrial design, including bus shelters (1960) and road traffic signals (1965–70) as well as cutlery, he continued to execute private commissions for the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, London, and commercial organizations.

This cutlery service was awarded the C.O.I.D. (Council of Industrial Design, later the Design Council) prize of the year for 1957.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 11 parts.

  • Table Knife
  • Table Fork
  • Cheese Knife
  • Dessert Fork
  • Fish Knife
  • Fish Fork
  • Table Spoon
  • Soup Spoon
  • Dessert Spoon
  • Teaspoon
  • Coffee Spoon
TitlePride (manufacturer's title)
Materials and techniques
Electroplated nickel silver, stainless steel and white composition handles.
Brief description
Electroplated nickel silver, stainless steel and white composition, Sheffield, Walker and Hall Ltd., 1959, designed by David Mellor CBE, 1953
Physical description
Place setting, "Pride", consisting of 11 pieces, the knives with stainless steel blades and white composition handles, the forks and spoons of electroplated nickel silver
Dimensions
  • Table knife length: 8.5in
  • Table fork length: 8.0in
  • Dessert, cheese knife length: 7.375in
  • Dessert fork length: 7.0in
  • Fish knife length: 8.0in
  • Fish fork length: 7.375in
  • Table spoon length: 8.375in
  • Soup spoon length: 7.875in
  • Dessert spoon length: 7.375in
  • Tea spoon length: 5.125in
  • Coffee spoon length: 4.375in
Credit line
Gift of the manufacturer
Object history
This cutlery service was awarded the C.O.I.D. (Council of Industrial Design, later the Design Council) prize of the year for 1957.
Summary
David Mellor (1930-2009) trained as a silversmith at Sheffield College of Art (1946–8) and the Royal College of Art (1950–54). In 1954 he established a silversmithing workshop and studio in Sheffield and became a design consultant to the firm of Walker & Hall. It manufactured his earliest designs, including the ‘Pride’ range of electroplated silver cutlery (1953), the simple and elegant forms of which were inspired by 18th-century English cutlery. This was the first in a series of cutlery designs, for which he is best known (examples London, V&A; Goldsmiths’ Co.) and which received numerous Design Centre awards. In 1962 he became a Royal Designer for Industry. In 1963 the Ministry of Public Buildings and Works commissioned from him a range of silver cutlery and tableware for use in British embassies and in 1965 the minimalist ‘Thrift’ range of stainless steel cutlery, to be manufactured at low cost and used in government institutions. In 1975 he began to manufacture his own cutlery at Broom Hall, Sheffield, using innovative, highly mechanized methods; in 1988 production was transferred to a purpose-built factory, designed by Michael Hopkins (b 1935), at Hathersage, Derbys. Although Mellor concentrated on industrial design, including bus shelters (1960) and road traffic signals (1965–70) as well as cutlery, he continued to execute private commissions for the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, London, and commercial organizations.

This cutlery service was awarded the C.O.I.D. (Council of Industrial Design, later the Design Council) prize of the year for 1957.
Bibliographic references
  • Christopher Frayling, David Mellor, master metalworker, Sheffield, Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust, 1998, p.16. ill.
  • Teleri Lloyd-Jones, David Mellor Design, Woodbridge, Antique Collector's Club, 2009. p.34. ill.
  • Lily Crowther, Award Winning British Design 1957-1988, London, V&A Publishing, 2012. p.14 & 24. ill.
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.292-1959

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Record createdJune 1, 2009
Record URL
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