Browse by Interest

A Day in the Life of Thomas Jefferson
bullet I Rise with the Sun
bullet Drudging at the Writing Table
bullet Our Breakfast Table
bullet To Labour for Another
bullet Attending to My Farm
bullet Museum...in the Entrance of the House
bullet Dinner is Served
bullet When the Flowers Were In Bloom
bullet A Delightful Recreation
bullet Sanctum Sanctorum
bullet All My Wishes End...At Monticello
   

Related Links
bullet Family Letters (with a sample word game)
bullet Quotations about Chess
bullet Historical Games, Toys, and Activities at the Monticello Online Shop

 


Home» Thomas Jefferson » A Day in the Life: Delightful Recreation »

Printer-friendly formatModern Monticello

Monticello Reproductions

Reproduction of one the Campeacy Chairs in the Monticello CollectionMany household items enjoyed by the Jefferson family are available to customers today because of a growing reproductions program sponsored by the Thomas Jefferson Foundation for sale through our Monticello Online Shop.

Licenses with prominent manufacturers such as the Kirk-Stieff Company, Mottahedeh & Company, Van Cort Instruments, and Sam Moore Furniture have created, respectively, such products as the Jefferson cups and goblets and the seau crenélé (a porcelain bowl used for cooling wine glasses) from the Dining Room; and Jefferson's fountain pen and compass from the Cabinet.

Other reproductions available through Monticello's Museum Shops and catalogs include the revolving bookstand Jefferson used in his Cabinet, and the wine glasses offered to his guests after dinner, as well as a campeachy" chair (reproduced from one made in the Monticello Joiner and a framed Declaration of Independence.

In addition to reproductions, the Foundation also offers gifts inspired by Jefferson and Monticello, including Jefferson cups and pillows that carry familiar Jefferson quotations.

Reproductions of Jefferson Cups with engravingsThe Thomas Jefferson Foundation initiated its reproductions program in the 1930s. In the early 1960s, the Kirk-Stieff Company, America's oldest silversmiths, began manufacturing licensed pewter and sterling Jefferson cups, so named because they were made from Jefferson's own design. Since that successful beginning, the Foundation has worked with a small but select group of industry leaders to capture the unique charm and excellence of Jefferson's home in painstakingly-made home furnishings and decorative giftware.

Monticello strives to uphold Jefferson's own high standards with a review process that involves a wide spectrum of people throughout the Foundation in developing ideas for new reproductions and adaptations. The Director of Museum Sales identifies potential licensing partners. Members of the Curatorial and Restoration Departments approve prototypes, and researchers review the wording of historical information that accompanies each reproduction.

« Back to "A Delightful Recreation"


Image Credits

  • Reproduction of one the Campeacy Chairs in the Monticello Collection.
  • Reproductions of Jefferson Cups with engravings.