Teapot 1796
The elegant, restrained design
of this teapot, with its bright-cut swags and ornamental bands, is entirely in
keeping with the Neoclassical taste that flourished at the end of the eighteenth
century. Oval teapots, either plain or fluted, were among the standard items
produced in Revere's shop after the Revolutionary War. They were fashioned from
sheet silver, produced with the flatting mill that Revere acquired in November
of 1785. Each teapot was constructed with an overlapping seam at the handle,
which was both soldered and riveted. This technique produced a very strong
joint, and it was also simpler for some of the less experienced journeymen and
apprentices in his shop to achieve.