• Wineglasses and Tulip Champagne Glass, Kennedy Administration
    Morgantown Glassware Guild
    tableware
    drinking cups
    State Service
    glassware
    This glassware was part of a set ordered by President John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy in 1961 from the Morgantown Glassware Guild of Morgantown, West Virginia. The purchase of the elegant, simple set ended a long tradition of engraved glassware at the White House. The glassware became widely popular as many Americans purchased the same set for their households.
  • Magnolia Residence Service Teacup and Saucer
    Anna Weatherley
    Pickard China
    china
    cup
    saucer
    This teacup and saucer is from the informal residence service designed by Anna Weatherly for the George W. Bush administration. The china features a magnolia branch and whimsical insects, including a lady bug on the interior of the teacup.
  • Bush State Service Bouillon Cup and Saucer
    Lenox China
    china
    cup
    saucer
    This cup and saucer is a part of the George W. Bush state china service. In designing the service, the Bushes looked to china used by former presidential families for inspiration. The gilded edge band on the saucer includes neoclassical reeding and incuse acanthus leaves.
  • Obama State Service Dessert Cup and Saucer
    Pickard China
    china service
    cup
    saucer
    This color photograph by Matthew D'Agostino is of a dessert cup and accompanying saucer which were created in 2015 by Pickard China in Antioch, Illinois. The designs demonstrate the shift from primary colors used more recently to the new selection of a fluted Kailua Blue, a unique color chosen by First Lady Michelle Obama to represent the blue waters of Hawaii, President Barack Obama's home state.
  • Decanter, Glass, and Fingerbowl
    Unknown
    glassware
    serveware
    drinking cups
    tableware
    This colored glassware, including a decanter, a glass, and a finger bowl, was likely made in England between 1820 and 1840. The glass and finger bowl were owned by President James Polk and First Lady Sarah Childress Polk. The decanter was given to the White House as a gift in 1907 by a woman whose mother purchased it at a White House sale in the 19th century.
  • Cup Decorated with Portrait Of George Washington
    Royal Saxon Porcelain Manufactory
    china
    portraits
    likeness
    drinking cups
    tableware
    memorials
    This porcelain cup was made by the Royal Saxon Porcelain Manufactory of Meissen, Germany, circa 1800, soon after George Washington's death. The manufacturer based the likeness on this cup after a portrait of Washington painted by American artist Charles Willson Peale.
  • Vermeil Group
    Unknown
    vermeil
    serveware
    drinking cups
    dishes
    furnishings
    This selection of gilded silver objects were made in the 18th and 19th centuries by some of the finest French and English silversmiths of the time. The pieces were part of a donation of over 1,500 silver gilt, or vermeil, objects made to the White House in 1956 by Margaret Thompson Biddle, a close friend of First Lady Mamie Eisenhower. Special cabinets to house the collection were built in a ground floor room of the White House, now known as the Vermeil or Gold Room.
  • Porcelain From the Washington and Madison Services
    Unknown
    tableware
    china
    serveware
    drinking cups
    State Service
    These porcelain serving pieces were made in the late 18th and early 19th centuries and used by early presidents. The Chinese export porcelain sugarbowl on the left was part of Martha Washington's personal china and bears her initials, as well as the names of the first states. The cup and saucer on the right were part of a service that James and Dolley Madison purchased from James Monroe, featuring a monogram designed by Mrs. Madison.
  • After-Dinner Coffee Cup in the Hayes State Service
    Haviland & Co.
    china service
    cup
    These porcelain cups, including an after-dinner coffee cup and a tea cup, were made for the White House by Haviland and Co. of New York City and Limoges, France, in 1879. President Rutherford B. Hayes purchased the cups as part of a state dinner service that featured elaborate designs conceived by American artist Theodore Russell Davis. First Lady Lucy Hayes had planned to select a floral pattern for the White House service when she had a chance meeting with Davis. Davis suggested that instead she opt for depictions of flora and fauna native to North America, and Mrs. Hayes agreed. She commissioned Davis as the designer, and he produced 130 distinct decorations for the 562 piece service.
  • Service Plate, Lunch Plate, and Tea Cup and Saucer, Reagan Service
    Lenox China
    china service
    plate
    cup
    saucer
    These porcelain serving pieces were part of a state dinner service made for the White House by Lenox China of Trenton, New Jersey, in 1981, during Ronald Reagan's administration. The pieces shown here include service plate, a lunch plate, and a tea cup and saucer. The Reagan service featured a wide red border with a gilt rim and crosshatch pattern and a raised gold Presidential Seal.
  • Cup and Saucer, Salad Plate and Dessert Plate for 200th Anniversary
    Lenox China
    china service
    plate
    cup
    saucer
    200th Anniversary of the White House
    This china set, including a salad plate, a soup plate, a dessert plate, and a cup and saucer, was part of a service made for the White House by Lenox in 1998. First Lady Hillary Clinton selected the pattern in honor of the 200th anniversary of the White House, which occurred in 2000. Mrs. Clinton chose a color and pattern that complemented the State Dining Room.
  • Still Life With Fruit, Goblet, and Canary (Nature's Bounty)
    Severin Roesen
    still lifes
    fruit
    food
    painting
    drinking cups
    This still life of fruit and a live bird is by Severin Roesen. The canary and the titular clear glass goblet are featured in the lower left corner of the painting, which is the most brightly lit, while the basket of grapes and other fruits falls into shadow on the right side of the painting. The German-born Roesen immigrated to the United States in 1848 and was a prolific painter of still lifes such as this one. Three of his still lifes are in the White House Collection.