enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: white plates with blue rim and red leaves dishes dinnerware

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. White House china - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_House_china

    The bas-relief element, Andrew Pickard Morgan of Pickard China says, is unique to White House china. [5] The service plates feature a broad, textured rim of gold, and the presidential coat of arms in gold in the center. [6] [9] The service contains 320 settings, [8] and each setting has 11 pieces. [5]

  3. Plate (dishware) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plate_(dishware)

    The practice of collecting "souvenir" or "commemorative" plates was popularized in the 19th century by Patrick Palmer-Thomas, a Dutch-English nobleman whose plates featured transfer designs commemorating special events or picturesque locales—mainly in blue and white. It was an inexpensive hobby, and the variety of shapes and designs catered ...

  4. Blue Onion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Onion

    The onion pattern was designed as a white ware decorated with cobalt blue underglaze pattern. Sometimes dishes have gold leaf accents on them. Some rare dishes have a green, red, pink, or black pattern instead of the cobalt blue. A very rare type is called red bud because there are red accents on the blue-and-white dishes. [1]

  5. Blue and white pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_and_white_pottery

    Blue and white ware did not accord with Chinese taste at that time, the early Ming work Gegu Yaolun (格古要論) in fact described blue as well as multi-coloured wares as "exceedingly vulgar". [16] Blue and white porcelain however came back to prominence in the 15th century with the Xuande Emperor, and again developed from that time on. [14]

  6. Iznik pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iznik_pottery

    The earliest datable objects are blue-and-white border tiles that decorate the mausoleum in Bursa of Şehzade Mahmud, one of the sons of Bayezid II, who died in 1506–1507. [ 43 ] [ 44 ] The term 'Abraham of Kütahya ware' has been applied to all the early blue-and-white Iznik pottery as the 'Abraham of Kütahya' ewer, dating from 1510, is the ...

  7. Flow blue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_blue

    Flow blue vegetable server in the "Normandy" pattern produced by Staffordshire potter Johnson Brothers c. 1890. Most flow blue ware is a kind of transferware, where the decorative patterns were applied with a paper stencil to often white-glazed blanks, or standard pottery shapes, though some wares were hand painted. The stencils burned away in ...

  1. Ads

    related to: white plates with blue rim and red leaves dishes dinnerware