







Petite French Earthenware Faisselle Cheese Mould Early 20th Century - 3½"
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A petite French ceramic faisselle, early 20th century, formed as a straight-sided cylindrical cheese mould with a slightly rolled rim and staggered drainage perforations to the sides and base. The body is glazed earthenware in a warm ivory tone with a soft sheen. It presents in good, timeworn condition with age-related staining, minor glaze wear, a few small rim nicks, and incidental kiln marks consistent with use in the dairy. Faisselles were indispensable in rural French kitchens and fromageries for draining whey from fromage frais and faisselle cheese, a tradition that predates industrial molds. The pierced ceramic form evolved from earlier wicker baskets, the term faisselle referring originally to the perforated container itself.
Produced in regional ateliers across France, these utilitarian wares were often made in simple faïence-like glazes that resisted acidity and absorbed heat evenly, reflecting everyday savoir-faire in the first decades of the 20th century.
Today it brings authentic farmhouse character to a kitchen shelf or pantry vignette, grouped with ironstone and stoneware. It can serve as a small berry or herb drainer, a desk caddy for pencils, or a tealight holder where the perforations cast gentle points of light. Its modest scale makes it an easy accent on a windowsill, countertop, or open shelving.
Condition and patina consistent with age.
Approx. overall 3½" high x 4" diameter
Approx. overall 9cm high x 10cm diameter
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