• Thumbnail for Salt glaze pottery
    Salt-glaze or salt glaze pottery is pottery, usually stoneware, with a ceramic glaze of glossy, translucent and slightly orange-peel-like texture which...
    17 KB (2,037 words) - 04:53, 19 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ceramic glaze
    to form and deposit glass, producing what is known as salt glaze pottery. Most commonly, glazes in aqueous suspension of various powdered minerals and...
    24 KB (2,863 words) - 08:04, 18 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Tin-glazed pottery
    Tin-glazed pottery is earthenware covered in lead glaze with added tin oxide which is white, shiny and opaque (see tin-glazing for the chemistry); usually...
    25 KB (3,362 words) - 00:32, 19 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Lead-glazed earthenware
    designs; salt glaze pottery, also often stoneware; and the feldspathic glazes of Asian porcelain. Modern materials technology has invented new glazes that...
    6 KB (721 words) - 20:50, 27 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for Pottery
    a sodium aluminosilicate glaze. In the 17th and 18th centuries, salt-glazing was used in the manufacture of domestic pottery. Now, except for use by some...
    89 KB (11,225 words) - 04:22, 16 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Williamsburg Pottery Factory
    a focus on low prices. In addition to Maloney's famed salt glaze pottery, Williamsburg Pottery grew to include other artisans that sold a variety of handicrafts...
    7 KB (740 words) - 05:52, 4 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Don Reitz
    American ceramic artist, recognized for inspiring a reemergence of salt glaze pottery in United States. He was a teacher of ceramic art at the University...
    15 KB (1,388 words) - 20:25, 18 February 2022
  • abandoned. The Birds and Welch produced utilitarian salt-glaze pottery. The site of the pottery works was listed on the National Register of Historic...
    2 KB (135 words) - 00:59, 21 April 2021
  • Thumbnail for American art pottery
    pottery. Robertson was deeply interested in glazes, and he developed both an oxblood glaze (inspired by the Chinese glaze) and a fine crackle glaze,...
    19 KB (2,408 words) - 19:53, 27 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Earthenware
    Earthenware (category Pottery)
    Earthenware is glazed or unglazed nonvitreous pottery that has normally been fired below 1,200 °C (2,190 °F). Basic earthenware, often called terracotta...
    12 KB (1,250 words) - 00:01, 3 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pfaltzgraff
    Pfaltzgraff (redirect from Pottery Hill)
    and in 1960, Pfaltzgraff opened their first retail store under the name Pottery Hill. During the 1950s and 1960s, the products were mostly sold in specialty...
    4 KB (371 words) - 13:16, 10 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Jane Hamlyn
    functional salt glaze pottery. Born in Whitechapel, London, Hamlyn initially trained as a nurse at University College Hospital London. She studied pottery part-time...
    4 KB (320 words) - 20:05, 1 March 2024
  • makes both zinc/Bristol glazed products as well as salt-glazed, hand-thrown, kiln fired items. Pottery was and is produced in Red Wing, Minnesota, USA,...
    9 KB (966 words) - 03:34, 19 August 2023
  • Thumbnail for Westerwald pottery
    Westerwald pottery, or Westerwald stoneware, is a distinctive type of salt glazed grey pottery from the Höhr-Grenzhausen and Ransbach-Baumbach area of...
    3 KB (265 words) - 11:00, 18 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Pewabic Pottery
    Pewabic Pottery is a ceramic studio and school in Detroit, Michigan. Founded in 1903, the studio is known for its iridescent glazes, some of which grace...
    21 KB (1,941 words) - 08:25, 4 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Stoneware
    Stoneware (category Pottery)
    Stoneware is a broad term for pottery fired at a relatively high temperature. A modern definition is a vitreous or semi-vitreous ceramic made primarily...
    21 KB (2,457 words) - 17:05, 19 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Cambridge, Wisconsin
    touted as the "salt glaze pottery capital of the world" because of the potteries located there. After Cambridge lost much of its pottery draw,[clarification...
    15 KB (1,330 words) - 01:22, 17 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for McDade Pottery
    In 1894, the pottery employed at least 20 people, including family members. The ceramics were initially salt-glazed. In this method, salt is tossed into...
    12 KB (1,496 words) - 17:52, 6 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Studio pottery
    pottery industry and was latterly head of pottery at the Central School of Arts and Crafts. She worked in media that Leach did not, e.g. tin-glazed earthenware...
    15 KB (1,927 words) - 22:20, 12 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Egyptian faience
    Egyptian faience (category Ceramic glazes)
    in the usual sense of tin-glazed pottery, and is different from the enormous range of clay-based Ancient Egyptian pottery, from which utilitarian vessels...
    40 KB (4,559 words) - 22:04, 3 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for National Museum of Australian Pottery
    Ford, Geoff; National Museum of Australian Pottery (1995), Australian pottery : the first 100 years, Salt Glaze Press, ISBN 978-0-646-12501-5 Ford, Geoff...
    5 KB (351 words) - 14:54, 20 May 2024
  • approximately the first five years, the factory produced heavy, salt glaze pottery with slip glaze interiors, stamped only with the vessels' capacities.: 7, 25 ...
    7 KB (819 words) - 22:42, 12 June 2023
  • Thumbnail for Catawba Valley Pottery
    Catawba Valley Pottery describes alkaline glazed stoneware made in the Catawba River Valley of Western North Carolina from the early 19th century, as...
    6 KB (764 words) - 18:29, 26 October 2020
  • Thumbnail for Denby Pottery Company
    Vauxhall, the pottery produced at least 25 tons of workable clay each day. In the nineteenth century most of the ware produced was salt-glazed stoneware....
    11 KB (1,071 words) - 17:24, 29 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Creamware
    Creamware (category Staffordshire pottery)
    glaze, which proved so ideal for domestic ware that it supplanted white salt-glaze wares by about 1780. It was popular until the 1840s. Variations of creamware...
    18 KB (2,353 words) - 00:08, 12 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Langley Mill Pottery
    closure in 1982, the pottery went through five distinct periods of ownership, producing a wide range of stoneware ranging from salt glazed ink bottles, utilitarian...
    14 KB (1,883 words) - 01:39, 6 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for American stoneware
    American stoneware (category American pottery)
    stoneware pottery popular in 19th century North America. The predominant houseware of the era,[citation needed] it was usually covered in a salt glaze and often...
    6 KB (680 words) - 06:47, 14 March 2023
  • Thumbnail for The Wilson Potteries
    introducing salt glazing at the first Wilson site, since the glaze was dominant in his home state of Ohio. The attributes of Edgefield, South Carolina pottery were...
    23 KB (2,995 words) - 02:28, 5 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Fulham Pottery
    earliest days, the pottery was a significant manufacturer of salt-glazed stoneware, initially brown, and later white; often the two glaze colours were combined...
    9 KB (1,097 words) - 20:13, 13 March 2023
  • Thumbnail for Salt
    the ceramic material, forming a strong glaze. When drilling through loose materials such as sand or gravel, salt may be added to the drilling fluid to...
    73 KB (7,581 words) - 17:09, 9 June 2024