Sèvres soft paste porcelain part dessert service with bleu céleste ground and gilding with floral trails and tooled husk wreaths about the borders. Painted in polychrome with flowers and fruit: the flowers include roses, anemones (some double-headed), tulips, convolvulus, honeysuckle, oriental poppies, asters, auriculas, viburnum, cornflowers and hops; the fruit includes grapes, plums, pomegranates, peaches, figs, rosehips, redcurrants and gooseberries. The gilding is formed principally of looped laurel garlands and wreaths, the former accompanied by crossed myrtle branches, the latter entwined with myrtle trails.The Earl of Essex, from whom George IV purchased this service, was most probably, the 5th Earl, George Capel-Coningsby (1757-1839), a friend of George IV, with whom he shared political views and artistic tastes in the 1780s and 1790s. He belonged to the fashionable francophile coterie which had close links with the equally fashionable anglophile society in Paris, whose standard-bearer was the duc de Chartres. In 1784 we even find the duc de Chartres, at the behest of George IV, doing Lord Malden (the Earl's courtesy title before he succeeded) a service. It is perhaps significant in this context that in 1816 Mr Fogg, almost certainly the dealer Robert Fogg who sold George IV numerous works of art, was stated to be the 'agent of the Earl of Essex' in the Customs House records in January 1816. 65 pieces: 34 plates, 2 round fruit dishes, 2 oval fruit dishes, 4 shell-shaped fruit dishes, 2 sugar bowls, 7 ice-cream cups, 2 round trays, 4 heart-shaped trays, 2 trays with attached jam pots, 2 bottle coolers, 4 half-size bottle coolers.