Serving Dishes & Platters
Type
Choose Your Style
Material
Special Offers
Shop by Color
Thomas Paul
Melamine features our exclusive designs translated onto high quality, easy to use melamine dinnerware.
Project Stone
Simon Pearce
From petit-fours to caprese salad, serve up something cool on this coastal-inspired platter. A reminder of carefree days spent beachcombing, the Sand Dollar platter is carefully handcrafted to evoke the natural beauty of summer, all year round.
Fortessa
This cheese board and platter offers a striking natural aesthetic, perfect for showcasing an array of cheeses, charcuterie, or hors d'oeuvres. Crafted to be both functional and decorative, it seamlessly fits into any dining setting, from casual gatherings to formal dinners. Its stackable feature makes storage a breeze, allowing you to save space without sacrificing style.
Thomas Paul melamine is inspired by designs found in our hand screened tectiles. We have taken our fun and fresh designs and applied them to durable melamine for your table.
Badash Crystal
Get the water chestnuts add them to the spinach dip and serve them with chips in this chip and dip bowl!
Twig New York
Foliage collection was inspired by the different shapes of falling autumn leaves. This collection brings a charming mix of modern design with classic bone china, allowing you to present appetizers and entrees in a unique style.
Artisanal Inc
This work of art is great for serving dry snacks next time you have a party at your home. It's a timeless piece and surely be loved by you and your guests.
A fresh take on our most popular wedding gift, the Celebration Platter: This simple yet functional platter features a wider, lower base than the original. Its flared rim is purpose-built for engraving anything from a milestone date to an inside joke - and beyond. A brilliant way to etch your memories in glass.
Napa Home and Garden
With a classic shape and simple handle, this cloche houses cheese, pastries or rolls.
Rosenthal
The Stripes 2.0 line design is an homage to Walter Gropius, reinterpreted with a contemporary feel. His hand-drawn design appears more linear because there are bigger gaps between the individual lines. A new modern, urban, and simplistic design is brought to the classic TAC in mix and match, with matte and shiny surfaces and shimmering metallic parts. The design is supplemented by color and façade elements taken from the Rosenthal am Rothbühl porcelain factory, which was designed by Walter Gropius. For this, the Rosenthal Creative Centre took photographs of pieces of the legendary exposed concrete butterfly roof and placed them on a wall plate with a 3D effect. The collection’s accentuated red tone, which is depicted on the glass plates and as a dot on the porcelain, was inspired by a railing at the factory. The Stripes 2.0 design draws on historical references, a building of immense appeal, and a unique mix of structures and materials that is characteristic of Bauhaus to capture the essence of the Bauhaus movement and its founder Walter Gropius and create an amalgamated statement of clarity and existence for the here and now.
Loading...