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Dining and Bar


  • Chrome by Chase-Art Deco for the Home

    The Art Deco style originated in Europe, but Americans embraced it for everything from skyscrapers to soap dishes.

     Chase Duplex Jelly Dish

    First Waterbury, then Chase

    Art Deco buildings like the Chrysler Building and Radio City Music Hall in New York, the Union Terminal in Cincinnati, and most of Miami Beach needed lighting and accessories to go with this exciting new style, and nobody did it better than the Chase Company.  Augustus Chase and other Waterbury (Connecticut) civic leaders established the Waterbury manufacturing Company in 1876.  The company specialized in brass, turning out buttons, pins, upholstery trim, saddle and harness parts, and novelties.  The business continued to grow as the Chase Metal Works became a major supplier to the US government during World War I.  Like many companies at the end of a booming wartime economy, Chase desperately needed to retool to peace.

     

     

    Chase for the Home: High Design, Low Price

    Frederick Chase mounted an aggressive marketing campaign introducing Chase products for the home, and by 1936, business was booming.  The Chase Brass and Copper Company became one of the largest producers of high quality machine made Art Deco accessories and lighting, offering products such as candlesticks, smoking accessories, barware, serving pieces, and lamps.  The products were sold in special gift departments called Chase Shops in Jewelry and department stores like Marshall Field’s and the Mays Company.  Over the years, the company commissioned the best industrial designers of their day to develop new offerings. Walter von Nessen, Rockwell Kent, and Russell Wright all designed a variety of products for the Chase Company.

     

     

    Emily Post, the Movies, & High Quality Chromium

    Chase Cocktail Shaker

    Chase products were inexpensive yet extremely well made, particularly their signature chromium finish.  Chromium is a chemical element that takes a high polish and home makers loved its low cost elegance- the gleam of silver without the polishing.  Unlike its competitors, Chase chromium had a brass or copper base under the chromium plated surface, guaranteeing that the chrome wouldn’t pit, flake, bubble or rust.  Home Economist Emily Post endorsed Chase Company products in a 24 page book called How to Give Buffet Suppers that featured a host of Chase Chromium serving and heating products.  Chase products frequently appeared on Broadway and in Hollywood films.

     

     

    The Chase Trademark

    The Chase Centaur mark was unveiled in the Fall of 1928.  The centaur holds a bow and appears to be in the middle of a hunt, or chase.  The Chase mark appears on almost every piece made after 1928, however, on some pieces the impressed mark is under the rivet that attaches the plastic handles.

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