Anonymous wrote:Yes I bought expensive porcelain plates and use them daily, even with kids. No chips or cracks. I’ve been married 14 years.
I think key is to buy porcelain and not ceramic. And then don’t buy dishes with gold or silver rims. Nobody has time to hand wash dishes!!
We use Spode Christmas dishes during during the month of December. They’re ceramic and have held up well. Kids have fond memories of Christmas dishes.
Anonymous wrote:Yes I bought expensive porcelain plates and use them daily, even with kids. No chips or cracks. I’ve been married 14 years.
I think key is to buy porcelain and not ceramic. And then don’t buy dishes with gold or silver rims. Nobody has time to hand wash dishes!!
We use Spode Christmas dishes during during the month of December. They’re ceramic and have held up well. Kids have fond memories of Christmas dishes.
Anonymous wrote:Do people still register for china and/or but it themselves?
I’m in my early 50s and know it was a thing when we got married in the 90s, but do people still spend that kind of money on “fancy dishes”?
I was on FB marketplace and noticed someone is selling my china pattern for nearly $1k. I think it might have been 8 or 12 place settings (can’t recall). Seems absurd for FB marketplace despite the fact that more mainstream retail replacement services essentially charge an arm and a leg for pristine sets.
Just curious if there’s really a market for such things.
I’m also curious if people with “fancy dishes” reserve them for special occasions?
My dishes have always been on display in my china closet (is that even a thing with young people these days?) and used for the holidays and dinner parties when we eat in the dining room. Because our family is growing as relatives are getting married and having kids, I was toying with the idea of buying dinner plates in my pattern…until I had sticker shock. (I inherited three other sets of china, so I’ll just use another pattern at the kids’ table.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Search Replacements.com for a decent idea of going prices.
FB prices shouldn’t be as expensive as Replacements.com imho.
I’m wondering if my pattern is just popular and that’s why the resale is absurd?
Anonymous wrote:Search Replacements.com for a decent idea of going prices.
Anonymous wrote:I was married 20 years ago, and decided not to register for China because my husband had a set he inherited from his grandmother. We’ve used it less than 10 times in the 20 years.
Since then we have been offered five other full sets from elderly relatives, and even an elderly neighbor.
I’m shocked you are finding them so expensive on Facebook. I see sets pop up in our buy nothing group, and cheap on Facebook regularly. And I’ve seen multiple sets at yard sales.