No one knows exactly when and who made the first porcelain
Limoges snuffbox. The soft paste Faience snuffboxes began to be produced
sometime around 1730. These antique snuffboxes can't either be identified by
back stamp marks, for none were put on them. Nor were they signed or dated.
There is no easy way to know if a antique Limoges snuff box is authentic beyond
having a grasp of the history of the styles they made in that time and the Four
big factories that made them, Chantilly(1725-1800), Saint Cloud(1677-1766),
Mennecy(1734-73), and Vincennes(1740-56), which became Royal
Sevres(1756-present). Sometimes a popular artist at the time would place his
signature on the antique Limoges snuffbox. The discovery of Kaolin and the
creation of hard-paste Limoges porcelain in 1768 brought many new companies into
the scene who began creating Limoges porcelain boxes in competition with the big
Limoges porcelain box companies. Identifying an 18th century Limoges snuffbox is
just as difficult for they also did not mark their Limoges Boxes with back
stamps and competitors were producing knockoff's of one another and stealing one
another's porcelain formulas and enamel recipes. For back stamps were used it is
still difficult to distinguish for many companies in competition would forge one
another's Limoges Box back stamps. It is in the 19th century that the soft-paste
porcelain ceased to exist and only genuine Limoges porcelain boxes were made of
the special clay Kaolin come solely into play. But in the 18th century snuff
became unpopular and the factories declined in snuff Limoges box making and made
more other subjects with porcelain. It was at this time that the Limoges
porcelain industry all centered in the actual area of Limoges and it's outlying
areas.