High quality bone-china jelly moulds were made by the firm of Shelley, of Longton, Staffordshire, in the 1920s and 30s in a variety of unlikely forms, including the armadillo and the crayfish and shells model above
A group of horizontally-ribbed pottery jelly moulds to form obelisks, the two larger examples, (22.5 and 17cm), by Copeland and the smallest, (13cm), by Minton, all early to mid 19th century
An unusual creamware curd mould by James Donovan, George's Quay, Dublin, who worked c1770-1829 (Godden)
A very small Wedgwood's creamware jelly mould of fluted form, early 19th century