Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
These bowls had decorations made by pressing various items into the clay before firing: reeds, sticks, bones and twisted cords were used, for example. The term Peterborough ware originally defined a sequence of styles of Impressed Ware, from Ebbsfleet ware, which was thought to be the earliest, through Mortlake ware to Fengate ware, the latest ...
Daher (also stylized as DAHER) is a French industrial conglomerate. It is operational across the aerospace, defence, nuclear, and automotive industrial sectors in the fields of manufacturing, services, and transport. It was founded in 1863 as a shipping company based in Marseille, France. Within its first decade of operation, it was taken over ...
Abingdon ware belongs to the earliest pottery found in Great Britain and was discovered together with a handful of Peterborough, Grooved and Beaker ware as well as Bronze Age sherds. [2] It is a regional variation of the so-called Southern Decorated series. [1] The Abingdon Causewayed Enclosure has been dated to the 37th or 36th century BC. [2]
Two types of decorated jugs: earlier yellow-splashed plain glaze and a later more green glaze Somerset [7] Humber ware: Late 13th to early 16th centuries AD Hard-fired, iron-rich usually red-bodied wares North Yorkshire [8] Ipswich ware: Early 8th to 9th centuries AD Hard, sandy grey ware made in both a smooth and gritty fabric Ipswich, Suffolk [9]
Grooved ware is the name given to a pottery style of the British Neolithic. Its manufacturers are sometimes known as the Grooved ware people. Unlike the later Beaker ware, Grooved culture was not an import from the continent but seems to have developed in Orkney, early in the 3rd millennium BC, and was soon adopted in Great Britain and Ireland. [1]
Demand for Laverstock ware was particularly high when Old Sarum was relocated to Salisbury in the 13th century and dateable examples from Salisbury, with fine-grained composition, show that production continued until the end of the 13th century, or later. [2] [3] The earliest remains at the site are coarseware from the 11th century.
Moorcroft's first innovative range of pottery, called Florian Ware, was a great success and won him a gold medal at the 1904 world's fair (the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, Missouri). Unusually at that time, he adopted the practice of signing his name, or his initials, on nearly all the pottery he designed, the production of which ...
This new Franciscan line was named Contours by George T. James. The Contours art ware line was sold in one color or duotone glazes, with or without decoration. The Contours art ware line was the only art ware or dinnerware line the company allowed the designer to use their name on the promotion and marketing.