Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family had Corelle growing up and my sister has a pretty set that is 20 years old. I thought about getting one for myself but we have porcelain tile floors and I've had a Corelle dish EXPLODE after being dropped. This happens to Corelle. There must have been a thousand sharp shards all over the kitchen. I am still finding them. I can't recommend them for that reason.
But wouldn't any ceramic dish explode when dropped on tile? My corelle cereal bowl dropped on hardwood and shards everywhere and I was thinking how bad it would have been on tile.
That said, I love corelle and its designs. And I love my corningware from years ago.
Anonymous wrote:My family had Corelle growing up and my sister has a pretty set that is 20 years old. I thought about getting one for myself but we have porcelain tile floors and I've had a Corelle dish EXPLODE after being dropped. This happens to Corelle. There must have been a thousand sharp shards all over the kitchen. I am still finding them. I can't recommend them for that reason.
Anonymous wrote:So I bought 3 sets of white dinner and salad plates/bowls from Macys Le Cellar. They ticked the boxes of being white with no fru fru designs or decorations, set without mugs, inexpensive enough on sale that when someone chips something down the road it’s not a crisis. They’ve held up so far.
Anonymous wrote:I prefer pottery - heath ceramics, east fork pottery, material things (local to dc) etc. but unfortunately spendy compared to Ikea and Correlle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many dishes have lead. I cannot figure out why those still are allowed. Pediatrician warned us about this when our first was born. Even if no kids, one might want to look into that and maybe prefer a set that is lead-free.
Huh? What is your source for this?
Anonymous wrote:Many dishes have lead. I cannot figure out why those still are allowed. Pediatrician warned us about this when our first was born. Even if no kids, one might want to look into that and maybe prefer a set that is lead-free.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like fiestaware. They are super sturdy and are still made in the USA so no weird chemicals. They are always on sale at Thanksgiving but you might be able to catch a Macy’s sale at some other random holiday.
All the stuff I have bought from crate and barrel looks good and then cracks into a million pieces. Their glasses are the worst.
+1
Anonymous wrote:I like fiestaware. They are super sturdy and are still made in the USA so no weird chemicals. They are always on sale at Thanksgiving but you might be able to catch a Macy’s sale at some other random holiday.
All the stuff I have bought from crate and barrel looks good and then cracks into a million pieces. Their glasses are the worst.