-
colored background).
Saltcellars and
breadboxes were
significant pieces of
household wares in
Russian hospitality. Many of
these saltcellars were
carved in...
- Encyclopædia
Britannica article "Salt-cellar".
Medieval and
Renaissance Saltcellars Open Salt
Collectors website Interview with a
collector of open salts...
- Bini-Portuguese
Artist ("Master of the
Heraldic Ship"),
Saltcellar with
Portuguese Figures, ca. 1525–1600, Nigeria, ivory,
accession no. 1972.63a, b. Metropolitan...
-
former decades. Most
diners sit at long,
shared tables, with
communal saltcellars and pots of mustard. Its bathroom,
unchanged for decades, has been described...
-
Maiden Lane, and was
classified as a
largerworker as well. A pair of
saltcellars, made by Rood
between 1724 and 1725, are
currently owned by the Metropolitan...
-
carved items of
ivory made by Benin's
artisans in the form of
carved saltcellars, spoons, and
hunting horns -
pieces of
African art
produced for sale...
- The
Saltcellar with
Portuguese Figures is a salt
cellar in
carved ivory, made in the
Kingdom of
Benin in West
Africa in the 16th century, for the European...
-
culture near the
Ivory Coast in West Africa, who
created elaborate ivory saltcellars that were
hybrids of
African and
European designs, most
notably in the...
- ivory,
leading to a
notable trade in
ivory artifacts such as horns,
saltcellars, and spoons. This
exchange underscored the region's
artistic talents...
-
December 13, 2022. Bernstein,
Richard (January 26, 2006). "For
Stolen Saltcellar, A
Cellphone Is Golden". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived...