ceramic ware

  • 51Wemyss Ware — (pronounced weemz ) is the brand name of the Griselda Hill Pottery, which is situated in the village of Ceres, Fife, Scotland. It was established in 1985 to produce colourful pottery based on the local Wemyss Ware that was made nearby in the 19th …

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  • 52Dipped ware — is the period term used by potters in late 18th and 19th century British potteries for utilitarian earthenware vessels turned on horizontal lathes and decorated with colored slip. The earliest examples have either variegated surfaces or geometric …

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  • 53Satsuma ware — (薩摩焼 satsuma yaki ) is a type of Japanese earthenware pottery. It originated in the late 16th century, during the Azuchi Momoyama period, and is still produced today. Although the term can be used to describe a variety of types of pottery, the… …

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  • 54Sue ware — or Chosen doki were in more common use.Sue ware is believed to have originated in the 5th or 6th century in the Kaya region of southern Korea, and was brought to Japan by immigrant craftsmen. It was contemporary with the native Japanese Haji ware …

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  • 55Imari ware — /i mahr ee/ Japanese porcelain noted for its rich floral underglaze decoration in iron red, blue, and gold, and later copied in China and Europe. [1900 05 after a locale in western Saga prefecture (Kyushu) which was the sole market selling this… …

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  • 56Ding ware — Song Dynasty ding ware porcelain bottle with iron pigment under a transparent colorless glaze, 11th century. Ding ware (Chinese character: 定瓷; Wade Giles: Ting; Pinyin: Dìngcí) was produced in the prefecture of Dingzhou, starting from the end of… …

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  • 57Hagi ware — nihongo|Hagi ware|萩焼|Hagi yaki is a type of Japanese pottery most identifiable for its humble forms and use of translucent white glaze.It originated in the early 17th century with the introduction of potters brought back from Japanese invasions… …

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  • 58Hispano-Moresque ware — Around 711, the Moors conquered Spain. They introduced two ceramic techniques to Europe: glazing with an opaque white tin glaze, and painting in metallic lusters. Málaga in southern Spain was particularly celebrated for its gold lustrewares in… …

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  • 59Cochin ware — Cochin Pottery is also known as Koji Pottery (traditional Chinese: 交趾燒; Hanyu Pinyin: Jiāozhǐ shāo). The only long time ceramic tradition that involved artistic considerations was Cochin ware, a folk craft originally from Kwangtung and brought to …

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  • 60Belleek ware —  porcelain from the factory at Belleek, in Fermanagh, Ire. (now Northern Ireland). Extensive local deposits of white feldspar and Cornish china clay and the use of skilled labour from England contributed to the early success of this factory,… …

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