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Both are around 13 inches tall, and the silver luster is quite exquisite. Case in point are these two pearlware beauties, the only known examples of their kind. (Mismatch, Tray diameter: 9”, bowl: 11 by 9.5 by 3”)Ĭreamware Wall Pocket, Staffordshire, Cornucopia, Molded Staffordshire figures portraying classical figures are endlessly fascinating, but they can also be rather perplexing. One antique Warburton reticulated oval creamware majolica plate. Material: Soft paste, overglaze polychrome enamelĪdditional Information: Footed bowl, open handles, lid with knop.Ĭreamware, Openwork Basket and Underplate, England, 18th Century Antique Staffordshire Creamware Figure Flower Seller c1800. The jug on the right is decorated under the glaze in a debased chinoserie pattern. The example on the left is enamel-decorated in a European-style house pattern.
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Pearlware, Sugar Bowl and lid, Foliate Decorated, England (Right): Staffordshire or Yorkshire, 17901820. It is also a type of porcelain which was known as salt-glazed, or creamware porcelain, but these aren’t the only types produced there. There is a noted porcelain company named Crown Staffordshire, and Staffordshire is a region that was, (and still is), home to many English porcelain makers. Material: Earthenware, interior of head and body in flint enamel glazeĪdditional Information: A rare and attractive stoneware jar…an elegant cat with Staffordshire porcelain is essentially all the above. It was probably first introduced soon after 1720 and in its earliest form was composed of the same ingredients as white salt-glaze - namely, white clay from Devonshire and calcined flint. Hover over "Ceramics, Metals & Glass" above for more categoriesĪntique Cookie jar, Cat Form, Brown Salt Glazed Earthenware, Scored Surface Creamware, which became Europe's greatest contribution to ceramics, evolved from these traditional Staffordshire wares. Many believe it was Josiah Spode who introduced underglaze blue transfer printing in Staffordshire in 1781. Looking for more categories from the Ceramics Section? The date range for transfer printing on creamware is generally considered to be c.