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Create A Pottery Account To Sell Your Pottery On This Website
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  1. 0.00.00.00.00.0 (0 vote) Things You Should Know When Collecting Bone China Pottery
    Marianne Navarro Bone China Pottery refers to the kind of porcelain that began to be manufactured in Staffordshire potteries by the end of the eighteenth century. Simply put, it is porcelain with added animal bone ash as stabilizer. Traditionally, the recipe was 3.5 parts kaolin or china clay, four parts china stone (later on replaced by feldspar) and six parts of bone ash. The output was stronger... products, articles

  2. 0.00.00.00.00.0 (0 vote) An Introduction to Agateware Pottery
    Marianne Navarro Agateware is used to refer to a class of English ceramics that started in the late seventeenth century. You can tell agateware pottery by its unique agate-like appearance achieved by combining clays with contrasting colors - hence the name. Because of agateware's swirly appearance, the procedures for it are not employed for human figures. It manifests its charm mostly in teacups, ... products, articles

  3. 0.00.00.00.00.0 (0 vote) The Birth of Delft Pottery
    Marianne Navarro Delft is the name of a Dutch town famous as a memorial to the seventeenth century imperial and commercial greatness of the Netherlands and for a native painter, Jan Vermeer, who painted sceneries of the said town. Delft is also a name attached to a type of pottery manufactured in that town. Delft pottery was first manufactured in Delft as well as other parts of the Netherlands as ... products, articles

  4. 0.00.00.00.00.0 (0 vote) All About Cauliflower Ware Pottery
    Marianne Navarro The term cauliflower ware pottery applies to pottery made in the form and color of cauliflowers and other fruits and vegetables. The cauliflower form for pottery was developed in the eighteenth century by Josiah Wedgwood, in cooperation with Thomas Bentley and William Greatbach in response to the leaf-patterned porcelain wares that were being made at their time and were gaining po... products, articles

  5. 0.00.00.00.00.0 (0 vote) Toy Dogs in Art Part IV: Toy Dogs in Pottery
    by Connie Limon. One of the most favorite subjects for the craftsman in porcelain and earthenware has been toy dogs in particular. In Chinese work it has been hard to distinguish between the lion and the dog. The lion-dog and the dog-lion share a lot of Chinese myth. The dogs of Fo during the reign of K'ang Hsi were dogs, however, and not lions. In the city of Peking in 1680 the Emperor K'ang His set up an imperi... products, articles

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