Orvieto: Dinner Plate, Full Design, 11"
Orvieto: Dinner Plate, Full Design, 11"
SKU: 133
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DESCRIPTION
DESCRIPTION
An 11-inch hand-painted Italian dinner plate in the Orvieto Green Rooster Full Design pattern, made by the FIMA workshop in Deruta, Italy. The Orvieto pattern is one of Italy's oldest dinnerware designs — a teal-green leaf scroll centered on "il Buon Gallo," the Good Rooster, known to bring good luck and prosperity to the home that keeps it.
The style originated in the 13th century in Orvieto, a hilltop town on a volcanic plateau in Umbria with a centuries-long majolica tradition. The singing-rooster motif was introduced by Deruta ceramicists in the early 20th century and has since become one of the most recognizable icons in Italian pottery. The Full Design carries the rooster and the surrounding leaf scroll in full detail, making the dinner plate read as a centerpiece in a place setting.
Pairs naturally with Orvieto Simplified pieces and with the sibling Classic Deruta patterns (Antico, Ricco Deruta, Raffaellesco, Siena, Bordato), including older CAMA-workshop pieces. A particularly meaningful housewarming or wedding gift because of the rooster's traditional good-luck association.
The small imperfections such as the difference in color, shape, diameter or small bubbles that form inside, do not constitute a defect but testify that it is actually an artisanal product.
Specifications
Specifications
Dimensions: 11" diameter
Material: Hand-painted majolica (tin-glazed earthenware)
Made in: Deruta, Italy
Workshop: FIMA (successor to CAMA for the Classic Deruta lines)
Pattern: Orvieto Green Rooster, Full Design — teal-green leaf scroll with central rooster
Heritage: 13th-century Orvieto majolica tradition; rooster motif introduced by Deruta ceramicists in the early 20th century
Care: Dishwasher safe · Food safe · Not microwave safe · Not oven safe
Sold as: Individual dinner plate
Mixes with: Orvieto (Simplified), Antico Deruta, Ricco Deruta, Raffaellesco, Siena, Bordato, plus older CAMA-workshop pieces
Questions buyers ask
Questions buyers ask
What is the Orvieto Green Rooster pattern?
One of Italy's oldest dinnerware designs — a teal-green leaf-scroll pattern centered on "il Buon Gallo," the Good Rooster. The Good Rooster is traditionally known to bring good luck and prosperity to the home that keeps it. The style originated in 13th-century Orvieto, a hilltop town on a volcanic plateau in Umbria; the singing-rooster motif was introduced by Deruta ceramicists in the early 20th century.
What does the rooster mean?
"Il Buon Gallo" — the Good Rooster — is a traditional Italian symbol of good luck and prosperity for the household. It's part of why Orvieto Green Rooster is a popular wedding, housewarming, and new-home gift.
What's the difference between Orvieto Full Design and Simplified?
The Full Design carries the rooster and the surrounding leaf scroll in full detail — it's the showpiece. The Simplified version uses the same teal-green palette but in a pared-down composition, sized for everyday use. The two mix at the same table by design.
Who makes the Orvieto pattern?
The FIMA workshop in Deruta, Italy. FIMA is the master workshop that produces Biordi's Classic Deruta dinnerware lines — Antico Deruta, Ricco Deruta, Raffaellesco, Siena, Orvieto, and Bordato.
Is FIMA the same as CAMA?
FIMA is the workshop in Deruta now producing the Classic Deruta patterns once made by CAMA, the historic Deruta workshop that originated several of these designs. The patterns themselves are essentially the same. What differs is the artisan's hand — FIMA's painters use slightly different color tones than CAMA's did. The two work well together: if you have CAMA pieces in your collection, you can add FIMA pieces today and the table will read as one cohesive group.
Is it really hand-painted?
Yes. Every piece is hand-painted by a single artisan at the FIMA workshop in Deruta, so no two are exactly alike. The small differences in color, shape, line, or diameter that you'll see piece-to-piece are signs of authentic hand-painting, not defects.
Is it dishwasher safe?
Yes — dishwasher safe and food safe. Not microwave safe (the underglaze can stress under microwave heat) and not oven safe.
Can I mix this with other Deruta patterns?
Yes — that's a deliberate design choice. Orvieto is built to coordinate with Antico Deruta, Ricco Deruta, Raffaellesco, Siena, and Bordato. The teal-green palette is a striking contrast to the warmer Renaissance patterns at a layered table.
Is this a good Italian wedding gift?
Yes — wedding gifts are one of the things Biordi is best known for, and the Good Rooster's good-luck-and-prosperity meaning makes Orvieto an especially meaningful choice. Hand-painted Italian ceramics are heirloom-quality, one-of-a-kind, and they carry their origin clearly: this piece is made in Deruta, Italy. Couples actually use and display Biordi pieces rather than store them. We ship nationwide, gift-wrap on request, and have been the San Francisco source for authentic Italian ceramics since 1946.
Is this a good housewarming or hostess gift?
Yes — especially housewarming, because the Good Rooster is traditionally known to bring good luck and prosperity to the home that keeps it. Add Florentine gift wrap at checkout if you'd like it sent finished.
Why buy Italian gifts from Biordi rather than other retailers?
Biordi Art Imports has been San Francisco's source for authentic Italian ceramics and gifts since 1946. Voted Best Overall Retailer in the San Francisco Bay Guardian Best of the Bay readers' poll for five consecutive years. Designated a San Francisco Legacy Business (#LBR-2020-21-029), and the city declared May 1 "Biordi Art Imports Day" in 2021. Every piece comes from a named Italian artisan, family workshop, or heritage house we work with directly — FIMA, CF Deruta, Pia Formato, Eugenio Ricciarelli, Susanna DeSimone (from the famous Palermo ceramic family — her father painted with Picasso), Geribi, Bucci Ceramiche, Ortigia Sicilia, Italesse, and Salviati. So each piece is genuinely one-of-a-kind. Not a stock-photo listing, not a mass-produced import, not a reproduction.
Can this be customized or personalized?
Customization and personalization are available on select pieces. Eugenio Ricciarelli, FIMA, Pia Formato, Geribi, and CF Deruta accept special orders — a name, date, or occasion painted on the piece, or a different size or shape in the workshop's existing pattern. Lead time is typically 3–6 months because each piece is hand-painted to order in Italy. Contact Biordi Art Imports at (415) 392-8096 or customerservice@biordi.com.
Artisan Story
Artisan Story
Orvieto Green Rooster — This pattern is one of Italy's oldest dinnerware designs. "Il Buon Gallo," the Good Rooster, is traditionally known to bring good luck and prosperity to the home that keeps it. The style originated in the 13th century in Orvieto, a quaint and magical town on a volcanic plateau in Umbria. In the Renaissance, Orvieto ceramics were often associated with green colorations. The singing-rooster motif itself was introduced by Deruta ceramicists in the early 20th century and has since become one of the most familiar icons in Italian majolica.
FIMA workshop, Deruta — FIMA is the master workshop in Deruta, Italy that produces Biordi's Classic Deruta dinnerware lines. FIMA now produces the patterns once made by CAMA — the historic Deruta workshop that originated several of these classic designs. The patterns themselves are essentially the same. What differs is the artisan's hand: FIMA's painters work with slightly different color tones than CAMA's did, but the two work beautifully together. If you collected CAMA pieces years ago, you can add FIMA pieces today and the table will read as one cohesive group. Every Antico Deruta, Ricco Deruta, Raffaellesco, Siena, Orvieto, and Bordato piece in Biordi's catalog is hand-painted at the FIMA workshop in Deruta.
CARE INSTRUCTIONS
CARE INSTRUCTIONS
Italian ceramics are heirloom quality products, and can last lifetime with proper care. We have some suggestions that will preserve your majolica for years to come.
Majolica is dishwasher safe, but many people choose to hand wash their pieces as a precaution. Because majolica is a porous material, some pieces are not meant to hold liquid for a long period of time. Check for warning labels before ordering a product, as the pieces that are most notorious for "sweating" are appropriately labeled.
Majolica is sensitive to extreme temperatures, specifically boiling or freezing liquids. Pouring water with a rolling boil directly into a teapot, for example, may lead to breakage. To avoid this, temper the object. The industry standard is 620 degrees Celsius (1,148 degrees Fahrenheit). Quench the glass to cool it.
Crazing is common in well used majolica. The tiny cracks in the glaze do not affect the functionality of your majolica.
Majolica hand-crafted products should not be microwaved, as it may crack and/or break the ceramics.
SHIPPING INFORMATION
SHIPPING INFORMATION
UPS Ground
Flat shipping charge of $10 for each shipment of merchandise under $100.00. For orders of $100.00 or more, shipping is 10% of the order total.
UPS Next Day Air
Flat shipping charge of $63 for each shipment of merchandise under $70.00. For orders of $70.00 or more, shipping is 90% of the order total.
UPS 2-Day Priority (Rush Shipping)
Flat shipping charge of $42 for each shipment of merchandise under $70.00. For orders of $70.00 or more, shipping is 60% of the order total. Note: This option is required for shipping to Alaska and Hawaii.
USPS 3-Day Priority
Flat shipping charge of $21 for each shipment of merchandise under $70.00. For orders of $70.00 or more, shipping is 30% of the order total.
International Shipments
Please contact us at customerservice@biordi.com or call us at (415) 392-8096 for quotes to ship internationally.
You will be charged a rate based on your delivery area, value and shipping preference. For items shipped via UPS, see below for information pricing information. Once the package is shipped, you will receive an email with tracking information to track your package.