This lovely Georgian pearlware tea set dates to around 1810. It is bat-printed in purple in a pattern that shows a rider sitting on a horse that is drinking from a stream, nearby are a cow, goat, woman and child. Each piece has a bright blue enameled rim with no printed border. It is unmarked and the maker is unidentified. A similar set that sold on Rubylane was tentatively attributed to Sewell, and canary yellow set sold by Christies used the same view but did not have the same shapes. Sewell was in business in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland, from 1804 to 1820 and produced similar tea wares with other rural genre scenes and enameled rims. Perhaps a marked piece will appear at some point to answer the question. Photo courtesy of eBay seller bohea4me.