enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: world of wedgwood website design

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Wedgwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedgwood

    Typical "Wedgwood blue" jasperware plate with white sprigged reliefs. Wedgwood pieces (left to right): c. 1930, c. 1950, 1885. Wedgwood is an English fine china, porcelain and luxury accessories manufacturer that was founded on 1 May 1759 [1] by the potter and entrepreneur Josiah Wedgwood and was first incorporated in 1895 as Josiah Wedgwood and Sons Ltd. [2]

  3. Victor Skellern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_Skellern

    Victor G. Skellern [1] (1909–1966) was a British ceramics designer and stained glass producer who was the art director at Wedgwood from 1934 to 1965. He helped to modernise Wedgwood, and his design work was a factor in the company's resurgence after 1935. He was also known for employing well-known designers from outside the company.

  4. Jasperware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasperware

    Jasperware vase and cover, Wedgwood, about 1790, in the classic colours of white on "Wedgwood Blue". The design incorporates sprig casts of the muses supplied by John Flaxman, Sr. [1] Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Jasperware, or jasper ware, is a type of pottery first developed by Josiah Wedgwood in the 1770s.

  5. Franciscan Ceramics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franciscan_Ceramics

    Wedgwood closed the Los Angeles plant, and moved the production of dinnerware to England in 1983. Waterford Glass Group plc purchased Wedgwood in 1986, becoming Waterford Wedgwood. KPS Capital Partners acquired all of the holdings of Waterford Wedgwood in 2009. The Franciscan brand became part of a group of companies known as WWRD, an acronym ...

  6. Keith Murray (ceramic artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Murray_(ceramic_artist)

    Keith Day Pearce Murray MC RDI FRIBA (5 July 1892 – 16 May 1981) was a New-Zealand-born British architect and industrial designer, known for ceramic, silver and glass designs for Wedgwood, Mappin & Webb and Stevens & Williams in the 1930s and 1940s.

  7. Hugh Wedgwood, 3rd Baron Wedgwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Wedgwood,_3rd_Baron...

    During the Second World War he served as an officer in the Kenya Regiment. In 1949 he married Jane Weymouth Poulton, daughter of W. J. Poulton of Kenjockety, Molo, Kenya; they had one son, Piers and two daughters. He was a farmer in Hillwood, Molo, Kenya, 1941–1964. Upon his father's death in 1959 he succeeded his father as the 3rd Baron ...

  8. Cecil Wedgwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cecil_Wedgwood

    Wedgwood became a partner in the firm in 1884 with his uncle Laurence Wedgwood and later his cousin Francis Hamilton Wedgwood. He married Lucie Gibson in 1888, and they had two daughters, one of whom married a brother of the Wedgwood pottery designer Daisy Makeig-Jones; Phoebe Sylvia Wedgwood (1893–1972) remained unmarried. [citation needed]

  9. Francis Wedgwood, 2nd Baron Wedgwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Wedgwood,_2nd...

    They had one son, Hugh Wedgwood (born 1921), later 3rd Baron Wedgwood. Wedgwood studied at the Burslem School of Art (1920–1922), and the Slade School of Art (1922–1925). He exhibited at the New English Art Club, (1927–1930) and Royal Academy (1931–1939). Upon the death of his father in 1943, he became the 2nd Baron Wedgwood.

  1. Ads

    related to: world of wedgwood website design