✦ Figurines & Ceramics

Snow White Glazed Ceramic Planter — American Pottery / Evan K. Shaw, 1940s–1950s

Glazed ceramic Snow White planter by American Pottery, Evan K. Shaw era, 1940s–1950s, showing Snow White in yellow skirt and blue bodice with airbrushed coloring

A Princess in Pottery: The Story Behind This Piece

Long before the age of mass-produced vinyl figures and limited-edition porcelain statuettes, a handful of American ceramics manufacturers partnered with Walt Disney Productions to bring beloved characters into the American home in the most tactile way possible — fired in clay, hand-glazed, and meant to sit on a windowsill or mantle for years. This charming Snow White planter is a beautiful survivor of that era, embodying the warmth and handcraft of postwar Disney merchandise at its most intimate.

Standing approximately six to eight inches tall, the figure captures Snow White in one of her most recognizable poses: hands gently gathered at her hips, skirt pulled in a shy, courtly gesture that feels lifted directly from the 1937 film's animation cels. The palette is unmistakably hers — canary yellow skirt, cobalt blue bodice and sleeves, jet-black hair, and those signature crimson lips and rosy cheeks — rendered here in soft airbrushed transitions that give the glaze a gentle, almost watercolor quality. It is a small but eloquent tribute to a character who changed American cinema forever.

The Makers: American Pottery and the Evan K. Shaw Legacy

The firm behind this planter occupies a storied corner of Disney collectibles history. American Pottery, operating during the 1940s and into the 1950s out of the Los Angeles area, produced a wide range of Disney-licensed ceramic wares at a time when the studio was actively expanding its merchandise partnerships. The company is closely associated with Evan K. Shaw, whose name has become shorthand among collectors for a particular style of California ceramics — sturdy earthenware forms with airbrushed glazing, simplified but expressive facial features, and a domestic sensibility that made characters feel at home in a living room rather than on a trophy shelf.

Shaw and his associates understood the American consumer of the 1940s: families wanted whimsy that was also useful. A planter was not merely decorative; it was functional. You could tuck a small succulent or trailing ivy into the open cavity at the back of the figure and let Snow White tend your greenery. That union of utility and fantasy made these pieces genuine household objects, not just trinkets — which is precisely why so many were used hard, and why well-preserved examples command such affection from collectors today.

Snow White Herself: Disney's First and Most Enduring Heroine

When Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs premiered in December 1937, it was the first feature-length cel-animated film in cinema history — an audacious gamble Walt Disney called "Disney's Folly" until the moment audiences wept and cheered in equal measure. Snow White's design was carefully engineered to read as soft and approachable on screen: large expressive eyes, a heart-shaped face, delicate hands. Those same qualities translated beautifully into three-dimensional ceramic form, and manufacturers like American Pottery leaned into her iconic costume rather than attempting any complex character portraiture.

By the time this planter was produced — somewhere in the years between the late 1940s and the mid-1950s — Snow White was already a decade-old classic. Disney re-released the film to theaters in 1944 and again in 1952, each time renewing public affection for the character and driving fresh demand for merchandise. A piece like this one would have been a perfectly timed product: nostalgic enough to evoke a golden memory, fresh enough to feel current. That timelessness is part of what makes Snow White ceramics from this era so enduringly collectible.

Condition, Patina, and the Charm of Age

This planter carries its age honestly and beautifully. Visible crazing — the fine network of hairline cracks in the glaze that develops naturally as ceramic bodies expand and contract over decades — runs throughout, particularly across the lower skirt. This is not damage; it is the fingerprint of time, and experienced collectors recognize it as entirely consistent with American Pottery pieces of this vintage. There is some minor paint loss on the red of the lips and cheeks, and a light layer of surface grime that speaks to a life well-lived on someone's shelf. The overall form is intact, the colors remain vivid where the glaze has held, and the figure retains all of the character and presence that made it worth keeping for more than seventy years.

This piece came to us as part of a larger Disney estate collection — a carefully accumulated trove of memorabilia assembled by a dedicated collector over many decades. Items like this Snow White planter were not bought as investments; they were bought as objects of genuine love. That origin story is part of what we find most meaningful about offering them: each piece carries someone else's joy forward into new hands. Whether you are a dedicated ceramics collector, a Snow White devotee, or simply someone drawn to the handmade warmth of mid-century American craft, this planter is a small, genuine piece of Disney history that rewards close attention.

Thinking of selling? Get a free, no-obligation offer.

One direct offer on your entire Disney collection — no commission, no auction wait. We handle the shipping.

← Browse the full estate collection

Shop available pieces on eBay →

✦ Free, No-Obligation Offer

Tell us about your collection

Send a few details — add photos when we follow up — and we'll get right back to you with one direct offer.

  • The whole collection — not just the trophy pieces
  • One offer, no commission, no auction wait
  • Anywhere in the world — shipping handled for you

Prefer to talk? Call (803) 226-3351

Free and no-obligation. By submitting you agree to be contacted about your Disney collection.