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Sassafras La Cloche Brick Oven $50.00 This heavy stoneware dish and lid from Sassafras brings an ancient Roman and Greek cooking method to the present day. Once used as a portable oven for cooking bread, fish, and meats, la cloche (or cooking bell) now helps modern cooks bake lighter, crustier bread and juicier fish and meats. The dish also doubles as a rustic serving plate for finished foods. To use, arrange dough or meat on the bott… |
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Sassafras Superstone Covered Baker $47.50 This heavy, natural-colored baker duplicates the effects of a brick-lined oven, distributing heat and absorbing moisture to produce crisp-crusted breads. It can also duplicate the clay-pot-method of cooking other foods, like beef with vegetables. Its domed lid-with-handle has a lip that fits onto the oblong bottom. For bread, the final rise takes place right in the baker. It works in conventional … |
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Signature Housewares Sorrento Set of 3 Canisters Looking to add to your Sorrento accessory collection? This Sorrento Set of three canisters in gold is sure to please. The canisters are 80-ounces; 48-ounces and 36-ounces respectively each with a silicon seal. Made of stoneware, these sets are durable and made for everyday use: perfect for flour, sugar, pastas and beans. These items are all dishwasher safe, for easy cleaning and years of use! A st… |
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Ceramic Water Crock Dispenser – Classic Plain $23.23 … |
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Laurey 8702 Cabinet Hardware 1-1/4 Ceramic Knob with Painted Design $1.89 1-3/8″, Hand Painted, Porcelain Design Cabinet Knob…. |
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Wine Bottle Cooler $65.00 Wine Bottle Cooler with glazed exterior and terra cotta interior. Wet the inside of the cooler with water (empty the water) and place the cooler inside your refrigerator. When placed on your table, this piece will keep your wine cool for hours. 5″Dx9″H… |
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RUSTICA: Aceto Balsamico (Balsamic Vinegar) bottle with Spigot (3.5 Diam. ) [#1907-RUS] $98.00 The highest quality balsamic vinegars are just as pricey and exclusive as the finest wines. But even ordinary balsamic vinegars should be stored in a cool, dark place, which describes this Balsamic Vinegar Bottle perfectly.Use balsamic vinegar blended with a good olive oil on your salad, but look for recipes for savory sauces and marinades and surprising desserts as well. The graceful shape, hand … |
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Melina’s Hand Painted Italian Ceramic Bottles with Extra Virgin Olive Oil, 2.5-pounds $7.99 Pepper Mill Imports, Inc. was founded in 1986 and aims to offer the finest made pepper, salt, and spice mill herb grinders in the world. Utilizing antique design, Pepper Mill Import’s grinders actually grind spices and coffee instead of smashing them like most modern grinders. The difference in flavor and aroma when using Pepper Mill Imports, Inc.’s pepper grinders is enormous. So whether you’re l… |
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Handpainted Italian Ceramic Centerpiece by A. Binaglia, Deruta $648.00 Italian pottery – “Dolphins”: large handpainted istoriato centerpiece by Alvaro Binaglia, Deruta. 13 x 19 x 3.3 inches – Made in Deruta, Italy… |
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Kids Clay/Dough Tools – Clay/Dough Tools, Set of 5 These brightly colored, durable plastic tools are made especially for kids. They can use this five-piece set to create, decorate, and shape clay pieces. These are easy to use and easy to clean…. |
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Italian White Pottery Lamp $344 -Material: Clay -Shade: Linen |
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Italian Taupe Pottery Lamp $321 -Material: Clay -Shade: Linen |
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Mycenaen Pottery: An Introduction $35.67 The aim of this handbook is to make Mycenaen pottery more accessible to the general reader by presenting a brief description, and placing it against its archaeological and historical background. Mountjoy expands on the illustrations from her 1986 guide Mycenean Decorated Pottery to include material from different areas of Greece, allowing an examination of the exchange and trade of Mycenean pottery. Particular emphasis is made to the definition of ceramic phases, for although imprecise, changes in pottery style are the best chronological measure for the Aegean Bronze Age. |
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Italian Pottery Marks: Faenza the City of Ceramics $29.32 Black & White Edition. The only pottery & porcelain identification guide written in English that explores the rich history of one of Europe’s most important ceramics producing centers, the city of Faenza. Faenza, from which the world of art coined the term faience, was home to such past greats as the Minardi Brothers, Pietro Melandri, Carlo Zauli and Riccardo Gatti and is now the home of the most important ceramics art museum in the world as well as the largest international ceramics competition on the planet. Unlike most identification guides this book brings the artists to life, explores their character and their world. It goes beyond dry facts and dates and offers its readers the opportunity to understand their collections in historical and human terms. With more than 125 ceramics marks and almost 100 photographs covering the 19th, 20th & 21st centuries, in a format similar to our first Italian pottery guide, the collector will find a wealth of information and a fascinating trip through time and art. |
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Iznik Pottery $18.99 Some of the greatest glories of Ottoman art are the luxurious ceramic vessels and splendid tiles made to decorate newly founded mosques and palaces by the Turkish pottery at Iznik (ancient Nicaea). Their designs combine purely Turkish motifs with elements ingeniously transposed from imported Chinese blue-and-white porcelain. Over time a more subtle painterly style and complex palette were developed, culminating in the brilliant combination of cobalt blue, turquoise, olive green, magenta, and red that became the internationally recognized Iznik hallmark. Iznik ceramics were highly prized far beyond the Ottoman Empire, and although the factories had passed their peak by the late seventeenth century, their influence lived on through nineteenth-century European imitations by such potters as William de Morgan and Cantagalli. |
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Poole Pottery $13.07 Poole Pottery is recognized as one of the most distinctive and most collected potteries of the twentieth century. Founded by Jesse Carter in 1873, by the 1880s the factory was well known for its tiling products, mosaic flooring and advertising panels. After the turn of the century the company flourished in the hands of the founder’s sons, developing the hand-decorated style that would be their signature for many years to come. In 1921, Charles Carter, the respected designer Harold Stabler, and the husband and wife John and Truda Adams established a subsidiary that would establish Poole as one of the centres of ceramic arts. The firm began to draw inspiration from many historical styles and cultures including Egyptian, Grecian and the Middle East all combined with the revival of the Delftware technique of freehand painting on a white tin glazed ground. Throughout the 1920s and ’30s Poole became synonymous with elegant and expertly executed wares produced in a daring and highly decorative style of modernism. The firm grew rapidly and employed a number of key artists and decorators who in turn brought their own ideas to the table. Post-war production was mostly based on pre-war designs, but in 1958 the company developed a whole new range of ’studio ware’. The Studio was seen as a design hot bed, with nothing off limits and no treatments or techniques out of bounds. The pieces from this period were expensive to produce, but the level of production and quality of design put Poole firmly at the front of the British craft pottery movement. This range became the basis for the more commercial Delphis range, which found immediate success and helped the company maintain its market position. The end of the twentieth century was a more difficult time for Poole, but it remains one of the great names of British ceramics and the decorative arts. In this highly illustrated introduction Poole devotee and expert Will Farmer tells the story of this remarkable and popular firm. |
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The Pottery of Santa Ana Pueblo $40.4 The small village of Santa Ana Pueblo in northcentral New Mexico has for centuries made distinctive pottery for domestic and ritual use. In this book, the authors relate new ideas about the evolution of pottery styles made at Santa Ana and compare these styles with those found elsewhere in the Pueblo ceramic tradition. In particular, this richly visual study describes the chronological sequence of forms and designs based on evidence not heretofore available. The book analyzes the sequence from the earliest date, circa 1760, when positive evidence of Santa Ana origin can be identified, through the end of pottery making for local use about 1925 through various revivals to the present time. The pottery of Santa Ana Pueblo exemplifies the fine artistic achievement that has brought Pueblo ceramics worldwide acclaim. In this study, Pueblo pottery authority Francis H. Harlow, along with anthropologist Duane Anderson and historian Dwight P. Lanmon, provides an original and ground-breaking investigation into the origins and evolution of this pueblo’s exemplary pottery. The result furnishes criteria for dating any vessel that comes to hand. A chapter on the recognized potters of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries recounts efforts to keep pottery traditions alive for future working potters. |
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Italian Green and Gold Pottery Lamp $321 -Material: Clay -Shade: Linen |
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Italian Green and Taupe Pottery Lamp $344 -Material: Clay -Shade: Linen |
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Italian Blue and Gold Pottery Lamp $321 -Material: Clay -Shade: Burlap -Due to the handmade nature of this item, size may vary slightly from dimensions listed. |
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Sociology of Pottery in Ancient Palestine: The Ceramic Industry and the Diffusion of Ceramic Style i $24.95 “This fundamental study offers a reconstruction of the social world in which pottery was manufactured, distributed and used in ancient Palestine. Part I concludes that ceramic wares in the Bronze and Iron Ages were mass-produced for commercial sale by small workshops, probably family owned and operated. The technological level was high, with potters’ wheels and permanent kilns being used. Part II argues that ceramic styles were rapidly spread throughout Palestine, primarily by itinerant merchants who sold ordinary household wares over great distances.” |
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The Pottery of Zuni Pueblo $163.26 The potters of Zuni Pueblo, in western New Mexico, are recognized for their superbly functional and aesthetically unique polychrome ceramic vessels. The authors present an authoritative and comprehensive study of 700 years of Zuni pottery, drawing upon 1200 examples from incomparable collections acquired at Zuni by expeditions dispatched by the Smithsonian Institution, as well as from museums across the country. The authors use ground breaking original research (which has become the standard for subsequent research teams) to study the evolution of the pottery styles of the Zuni Pueblo. Every individual type and style of pottery made at Zuni is discussed and illustrated chronologically and in detail. The book offers a history of the Zuni Pueblos, an introduction to Ashiwi (Zuni) pottery, as well as a chronological history of the craft. The authors examine fine and rare examples of pots–many of which are from private collections–in terms of forms and designs from the ancient antecedents of Zuni pottery to the contemporary work being produced today. The definitive treatment of the extraordinarily popular Zuni Pueblo’s long and complex ceramic tradition, this book sets the gold standard and will be an indispensable reference for researchers, collectors, Native arts enthusiasts, archaeologists, and visitors to the Southwest. |
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Hand Painted Pottery Supplies Cat Dishes $14.69 Hand Painted Pottery Supplies Cat Dishes are designed for your cute cat! High quality ceramic made, pottery dish is safe and healthy. No matter how the pet eat, pottery dish can clean easily. Pet dish is economy! Pottery dish is a cute pet dish and it can be used as a cat snack bowl. Don’t miss good pottery dish and buy one for your cute pet. |
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Cute Footprint Pottery Elliptic Supplies Pet Dishes $15.69 Cute Footprint Pottery Supplies Pet Dishes are designed for your cute cat! High temperature ceramic made, pottery dish is safe and healthy. No matter how the pet eat, pottery dish can clean easily. Pet dish is economy! Pottery dish is a cute pet dish and it can be used as a pet snack bowl. Don’t miss good pottery dish and buy one for your cute pet. |
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Cute Cat Face Pottery Supplies Pet Dishes $12.69 Cute Cat Face Pottery Supplies Pet Dishes are designed for your cute cat! High temperature ceramic made, pottery dish is safe and healthy. No matter how the pet eat, pottery dish can clean easily. Pet dish is economy! Pottery dish is a cute pet dish and it can be used as a pet snack bowl. Don’t miss good pottery dish and buy one for your cute pet. |
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Cute Printed Footprint Pottery Supplies Cat Dishes $17.39 Cute Footprint Pottery Supplies Pet Dishes are designed for your cute cat! High temperature ceramic made, pottery dish is safe and healthy. No matter how the pet eat, pottery dish can clean easily. Pet dish is economy! Pottery dish is a large pet dish and it can be used as a pet snack bowl. Don’t miss good pottery dish and buy one for your cute pet. |
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Cute Footprint Pottery Supplies Pet Dishes $17.39 Cute Footprint Pottery Supplies Pet Dishes are designed for your cute cat! High temperature ceramic made, pottery dish is safe and healthy. No matter how the pet eat, pottery dish can clean easily. Pet dish is economy! Pottery dish is a large pet dish and it can be used as a pet snack bowl. Don’t miss good pottery dish and buy one for your cute pet. |
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Tin Enameled Pottery $33.29 ART PRIMER CERAMIC SERIES, No. PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM AND SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ART TIN ENAMELED POTTERY MAIOLICA, DELFT AND OTHER STANNIFEROUS FAIENCE BY EDWIN ATLEE BARBER, A. M., PH. D. CURATOR PRINTED FOR THE MUSEUM PHILADELPHIA 1906 PREFATORY NOTE. The Art Primers of the Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art are designed to furnish, in a condensed form, for the use of collectors, historical and art students and artisans, the most reliable information, based on the latest discoveries relating to the various industrial arts. Each monograph, complete in itself, contains a historical sketch, review of processes, description of characteristic examples of the best productions, and all available data that will serve to facilitate the identification of specimens. In other words, these booklets are intended to serve as authori tative and permanent reference works on the various subjects treated. The illustrations employed, unless otherwise stated, are reproductions of examples in the Museum collections. In reviewing the various branches of ceramics the geographical arrangement used by other writers has given place to the natural or technical classification, to permit the grouping together of simi lar wares of all countries and times, whereby pottery, or opaque ware, is classified according to glaze, its most distinctive feature, while porcelain, or translucent ware, is grouped according to body In preparing the material for Tin Enameled Pottery, the author has consulted the principal authorities on the various branches of the subject, but he is particularly indebted, for many of the facts presented, to the South Kensington Handbook on Maiolica, by T. Drury E. Fortnum EuropdischenFayencen, by Dr. Justus Brinck mann English Earthenware and Stoneware, by William Burton French Faience, by M. L, Solon Histoire des Faiences Pafriotiqu sous La Revolution, by M. Champfleury Dictmnaire de. la Oeramigue, by Edouard Garnier Dutch Pottery and Porcelain, by W, Pitcairn Knowles Hispano-Moresque Ware of the Fifteenth Century, by A. van de Put Old English Pottery, Named, Dated and Inscribed, by John Eliot Hodgkin and Edith HodgMn, and BRstoire Generate de la Fai nce Andenne, by Kis Paquot. The matter relating to Talavera ware and the recently discovered Mexican or Puebla maiolica appears here for the first time. E. A. B. TIN ENAMELED POTTERY. CHARACTERISTICS. Tin Enameled Pottery, known also as Stanniferous Faience from starwwm, the Latin word for tin, is a coarse, more or less porous, ware covered with a heavy, opaque, putty-like white enamel, resembling in appearance thick white lead paint, which, as a rule, shows on the under sides of pieces, or the backs of plates, in ridges or drops where its flow has ceased. The word enamel, as here used, signifies an opaque coating on the ware, as distinguished from glaze, which is transparent or translucent. True majolica and delft wares are enameled, ordinary pottery, such as modern red or brown kitchen ware, is glaz |
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Making Pottery for Profit $35.18 making pottery for profit RICHARD D. OLE Instructor of Ceramics, School of Adult Education, Whtte Plains, N. Y. PEG B. STARR of Peg Bee Studio, White Plains, N. Y. PUBLISHING CO., MC . New York Jacket and illustrations are by Richard Correll Copyright, 1951 Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. AH rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions Manufactured in the United States of America by EL 5Wff, New Yorlc C contents 1 POTTER S PROGRESS 7 case of the garden club lady 9 case of the hidden talent 11 pottery as therapy 12 a career – for you 13 2 SETTING UP YOUR POTTERY STUDIO 14 a studio in your home 14 restrictions 16 where to locate 16 ideal layout 18 raw materials 19 slip processing 19 casting bench 22 mold storage 23 facilities for plastic clay 23 equipment in raw clay area 24 the finishing area 26 decorating center 27 glazing section 28 compounding your glazes 29 the kUn quarter 30 handling finished ware 31 plaster work 32 MffW CITY carpentry section 32 metal work 33 3 MARKETING YOUR WARE 34 getting a start 34 setting prices at the start 35 direct mail advertising 37 designing a circular 39 advertising in publications 42 packaging 43 a shop of your own 44 wholesale vs. retail 45 consignment selling 47 agents and jobbers 48 cost analysis 48 overhead 50 bookkeeping 52 getting the right price 52 4 DINNERWARE 55 through the ages 55 development of potteries 56 the studio potter s place in the picture 57 what to make 57 hand methods 59 the potter s wheel 60 jiggering 61 decorating 62 china decorating 64 designing for production 66 touring a dinnertoare factory 68 5 CERAMIC SCULPTURE 72 a special form of sculpture 72 planning the piece 73 sculpture in the home 75 whatto quot sculp quot 76 religious sculpture 78 relief sculpture 79 marketing and pricing 79 architectural sculpture 80 limited editions 81 mass production 81 6 CERAMIC JEWELRY 83 lilliput potters 83 equipment 84 what to make 85 ceramic jewelry combined with art metal work 87 ceramic buttons 88 religious medallions 89 pricing 89 miniatures 90 7 DECORATIVE TILES 92 it s always time for tiles 92 hand-crafted vs. commercial tile 93 decorating 94 mounting tiles 95 multiple tiles 95 architectural tiles 96 fireplace facings 96 more ideas to work on 97 LAMPS 99 lamps make fine show pieces 99 styles in lamps 100 dual-purpose lamps 100 designing a lamp 101 making the ceramic lamp base 103 lamp shades 103 wiring 105 pricing 106 marketing lamps 107 9 GARDEN AND FLORAL POTTERY 109 basic bowls 109 outdoor pottery 110 garden statuary 111 architectural pottery 111 10 101 MONEY-MAKING IDEAS FOR NOVELTIES 113 11 TEACHING POTTERY FOR PROFIT 129 prerequisites 129 arranging your studio facilities 130 providing tools 132 size of classes 133 getting new students 133 tuition fees 134 firing and materials charges 135 syllabus for beginner s course 137 sign them up again 139 advanced lessons 140 cleaning up 141 student exhibitions 142 teaching children 143 salaried positions teaching pottery 1 |
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Italian Pottery Marks from Cantagalli to Fornasetti (Black and White Edition) $21.83 The 1st Identification Guide Of Late 19th & Early 20th c. Italian Pottery & Porcelain Marks for English-Speaking Collectors. Praised by collectors & dealers internationally as an essential guide, it’s been included in the traveling library of Antiques Roadshow & received a glowing review in NEAJ, July 2005. Mr. Wendell Garrett, Senior VP of Sotheby’s & Editor at Large of The Magazine Antiques said in a personal note to the authors "I am most impressed. The book is comprehensive in scope, scholarly in research, beautiful in its illustrations, and clear in its writing. Everyone interested in ceramics – collectors, curators, scholars and students should have a copy on his or her shelf." (6/13/05) For the very first time information on more than 120 Italian factories, studios, artists & over 300 identified marks becomes readily accessible to those who can’t read Italian, making this Guide indispensable for the collector. |
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Sociology of Pottery in Ancient Palestine: The Ceramic Industry and the Diffusion of Ceramic Style in the Bronze and Iron Ages $32.26 This fundamental study offers a reconstruction of the social world in which pottery was manufactured, distributed and used in ancient Palestine. Part I concludes that ceramic wares in the Bronze and Iron Ages were mass-produced for commercial sale by small workshops, probably family owned and operated. The technological level was high, with potters’ wheels and permanent kilns being used. Part II argues that ceramic styles were rapidly spread throughout Palestine, primarily by itinerant merchants who sold ordinary household wares over great distances. |
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Household Pottery Candy Fruit Plates $32.39 Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. |
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The Ceramic Art: A Compendium of the History and Manufacture of Pottery and Porcelain $36.1 This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This IS NOT an OCR’d book with strange characters, introduced typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. |
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Italian Ceramic Art $32.96 This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts – the books may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. |
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A River Apart: The Pottery of Cochiti & Santo Domingo Pueblos $58.74 A River Apart presents multi-vocal perspectives on the pottery of Cochiti and Santo Domingo Pueblos, located along the central Rio Grande Valley in New Mexico. Separated by a great river, Cochiti and Santo Domingo Pueblos shared a ceramic tradition for centuries until increasing contact with outsiders ushered in tumultuous changes that set the pueblos on divergent paths. Cochiti Pueblo more freely modified its traditional forms of painted pottery to appeal to new markets while the Santo Domingo Pueblo shunned the influences of the tourist trade and art market, continuing an artistic trajectory that was conservative and insular. A River Apart brings together a distinguished a team of anthropologists, artists, and art historians from Native and non-Native perspectives to examine the pottery traditions of the two Pueblos and decipher what discoveries can be made and identities established through these representations of material culture. As the essays reveal, the pottery represents more than anthropology’s artifacts and art for the marketplace. From the pottery we learn much about the pueblos’ history, myths and legends, communities, and the artist’s responses to influences from the outside world. This volume is a fascinating case study in how cultures develop; how art, culture and community are interwoven; and how art is created, interpreted, valued, bought and sold. This publication is companion to an exhibition to open at the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture (Museum of New Mexico) in Santa Fe in Fall 2008 and featuring over 200 Santo Domingo and Cochiti pots. A River Apart is a valuable addition to the libraries of those interested in Pueblo Indian pottery, Native American arts andculture, and southwestern history and anthropology. |
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Household Pottery Square Salad Fruit Plates $23.69 Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. |
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Household Round Pottery Fruit Candy Plates $28.99 Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. |
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Household Pottery Heart Shape Fruit Plates $30.99 Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. |
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Household Pottery Butterfly Pattern Fruit Plates $22.99 Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. |
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Household Round Pottery Dinner Fruit Plate $35.69 Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. |
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Stylish Round Pottery Lighthouse Print Plate $31.99 Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. |
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Household Round Pottery Flower Pattern Plate $22.99 Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. |
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Household Square Pottery Dinner Fruit Plates $31.99 Unique fruit plate is a great way to store your fruits and candy in an elegant and modern fashion. The color will never wear or fade for a lifetime of everyday enjoyment and use. Also this classical Pottery Plate will be a nice decoration when not in use. Add a touch of leisure life style to your table with this Elegant Ceramic Boat Shape Candy Fruit Plate. |
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Glidden Pottery: Alfred Mid-Century Highstyle Stoneware $86.37 This book is the fascinating story of the company and the people who produced Glidden pottery. The first section of the book tells about the history of the company, the important designers who worked there, and the wonderful designs they created. The second section of the book contains a richly-illustrated catalog of Glidden pottery. The photo illustrations show the patterns and shapes produced by the company, arranged by number, at a level of detail never before available. The catalog also features the author’s informative commentary about individual pieces. This book is the most complete work on the subject available and is written in a style that will appeal to both avid collectors and casual readers. At the same time, it contains a level of detail that will be valuable to historians and researchers. The information from this book was a major part of the research for the 2001 Glidden exhibition at the Schein-Joseph International Museum of Ceramic Art, Alfred, NY, which was organized by director Margaret Carney, Ph.D. |
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The Art of Ceramics: European Ceramic Design 1500-1830 $65.02 The great age of European ceramic design began around 1500 and ended in the early nineteenth century with the introduction of large-scale production of ceramics. This beautiful book is the first complete history of European ceramic design and decoration during this period, presenting it not only in art-historical terms but also in the context of the era’s social, cultural, economic, and scientific developments. Howard Coutts considers the main stylistic trends — Renaissance, Mannerism, Oriental, Rococo, and Neoclassicism — as they were represented in such products as Italian Maiolica, Dutch Delftware, Meissen and Sevres porcelain, Staffordshire, and Wedgwood pottery. He pays close attention to changes in eating habits over the period, particularly the layout of a formal dinner. And he discusses such fascinating topics as the development of ceramics as room decoration, the transmission of images via prints, fashion and marketing of ceramics and other luxury goods, and the intellectual background to Neoclassicism. Comprehensive, engrossing, and lavishly illustrated, the book is essential reading for anyone interested in ceramics and their history. |
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A Manual of Egyptian Pottery, Volume 1: Fayum a – Lower Egyptian Culture $37.33 This is the first volume in a four-book set covering all Egyptian pottery, ranging from the earliest (Fayum A) ceramics to pottery made in Egypt today, organized by historical periods. The manuals are quick identification guides as well as starting points for more extensive research. For each period, ceramic types are illustrated with a line drawing, accompanied by a description that includes information on the pot’s material, manufacturing techniques, surface treatment, and shape. Color plates of representative ceramic types are included to give the clearest sense of the color, composition, and surface treatment. All four volumes provide an extensive list of suggested readings as well as a bibliography for each period. Introductory chapters in each book discuss the basics of pottery manufacture and analysis. This second edition boasts a new, expanded introduction. The first comprehensive guide to Egyptian pottery, this set will prove valuable to students as well as experienced field archaeologists. The volumes come in paperback and spiral-bound versions. The spiral bound versions, with hard laminated covers and tabs, are designed especially for the field and lab. |
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A Treatise on Ceramic Industries; A Complete Manual for Pottery, Tile, and Brick Manufacturers $36.1 This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. |
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Byzantine Ceramic Art: Notes on Examples of Byzantine Pottery Recently Found at Constantinople with $28.66 This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts – the books may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. |
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Tin Enameled Pottery: Majolica, Delft and Other Stanniferous Faience (1906) $18.23 ART PRIMER CERAMIC SERIES, No. PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM AND SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ART TIN ENAMELED POTTERY MAIOLICA, DELFT AND OTHER STANNIFEROUS FAIENCE BY EDWIN ATLEE BARBER, A. M., PH. D. CURATOR PRINTED FOR THE MUSEUM PHILADELPHIA 1906 PREFATORY NOTE. The Art Primers of the Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art are designed to furnish, in a condensed form, for the use of collectors, historical and art students and artisans, the most reliable information, based on the latest discoveries relating to the various industrial arts. Each monograph, complete in itself, contains a historical sketch, review of processes, description of characteristic examples of the best productions, and all available data that will serve to facilitate the identification of specimens. In other words, these booklets are intended to serve as authori tative and permanent reference works on the various subjects treated. The illustrations employed, unless otherwise stated, are reproductions of examples in the Museum collections. In reviewing the various branches of ceramics the geographical arrangement used by other writers has given place to the natural or technical classification, to permit the grouping together of simi lar wares of all countries and times, whereby pottery, or opaque ware, is classified according to glaze, its most distinctive feature, while porcelain, or translucent ware, is grouped according to body In preparing the material for Tin Enameled Pottery, the author has consulted the principal authorities on the various branches of the subject, but he is particularly indebted, for many of the facts presented, to the South Kensington Handbook on Maiolica, by T. Drury E. Fortnum EuropdischenFayencen, by Dr. Justus Brinck mann English Earthenware and Stoneware, by William Burton French Faience, by M. L, Solon Histoire des Faiences Pafriotiqu sous La Revolution, by M. Champfleury Dictmnaire de. la Oeramigue, by Edouard Garnier Dutch Pottery and Porcelain, by W, Pitcairn Knowles Hispano-Moresque Ware of the Fifteenth Century, by A. van de Put Old English Pottery, Named, Dated and Inscribed, by John Eliot Hodgkin and Edith HodgMn, and BRstoire Generate de la Fai nce Andenne, by Kis Paquot. The matter relating to Talavera ware and the recently discovered Mexican or Puebla maiolica appears here for the first time. E. A. B. TIN ENAMELED POTTERY. CHARACTERISTICS. Tin Enameled Pottery, known also as Stanniferous Faience from starwwm, the Latin word for tin, is a coarse, more or less porous, ware covered with a heavy, opaque, putty-like white enamel, resembling in appearance thick white lead paint, which, as a rule, shows on the under sides of pieces, or the backs of plates, in ridges or drops where its flow has ceased. The word enamel, as here used, signifies an opaque coating on the ware, as distinguished from glaze, which is transparent or translucent. True majolica and delft wares are enameled, ordinary pottery, such as modern red or brown kitchen ware, is glaz |
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Oblong Pottery Platter $111 - Hand thrown pottery |
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Italian Blue Table Lamp $321 - Italian blue finish – White shade – 3-way switch – Ceramic lamps are hand-made and hand-painted – Colors and distress may vary slightly from images |
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Italian Turquoise Table Lamp $321 - Italian turquoise finish – White shade – 3-way switch – Ceramic lamps are hand-made and hand-painted – Colors and distress may vary slightly from images |
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Italian Red Table Lamp $343 - Italian Red finish – White shade – 3-way switch – Ceramic lamps are hand-made and hand-painted – Colors and distress may vary slightly from images |
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This Blessed Plot, This Earth: English Pottery Studies in Honour of Jonathan Horne $52.81 Encompassing a broad range of new research, over 30 specialists from around the world consider topics including the first pottery in James Fort, North America; shipping containers for Atlantic ceramic cargoes; Delftware exports to the West Indies; recent archaoeological discoveries in London; an 18th-century duke’s bill for ceramicware; and the 16th-century Rheinland stoneware industry in England. |
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Crete in Transition: Pottery Styles and Island History in the Archaic and Classical Periods $71.6 This work presents a classification system and absolute chronology for black-gloss wares from Crete, establishing the first local and regional ceramic sequences during the period from 600 to 400 B.C. This new chronological foundation of datable pottery from excavated sites fills in the so-called 6th/5th-century gap and dispels the prevailing view that this was a period of decline in population and one of artistic and cultural impoverishment. The 6th century heralded important changes in Cretan society, reflected in the reorganization of burial grounds, new patterns of sanctuary dedication, and the circulation of exotica among the elite. The study reveals unsuspected connections with mainland Greece, especially Sparta and Athens. Historians and archaeologists will find the author’s conclusions, and their implications, to be of considerable interest. |
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Akro Mils ZEA12001P54 12 Glaze Resin Pottery Planter, Celtic Bronze (6 Pack) $57.91 Akro Mils ZEA12001P54 12″ Glaze Resin Pottery Planter, Celtic Bronze (6 Pack) Akro Mils ZEA12001P54 12″ Glaze Resin Pottery Planter, Celtic Bronze (6 Pack) Features: Planter Enhances your home with a ceramic, glaze like finish Uniquely brushed texture Embossed pattern Celtic Bronze Holds 2.4 gallons 12″ outside width |
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