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A set of medallion, rice dish, and dinner plate of the Double Peacock Dinner Service, famille rose Export porcelain vase with a European scene, Kangxi period Porcelain tureen and tray with lid shaped like a mandarin duck, decorated in overglaze enamels and gilding, Qing dynasty, c. 1750–1760
Sixteen Canadian women artists were chosen to paint the 204 [a] china blanks with Canadian historical scenes and birds, ferns, fish, flowers and fruits. [8] They were given details of the plates or cups and saucers they were to paint, and worked independently. [9] The WAAC arranged to obtain the china blanks. According to the Secretary of the ...
The Romans used lead glazes for high-quality oil lamps and drinking cups. [2] At the same time in China, green-glazed pottery dating back to the Han period (25–220 AD) gave rise eventually to the sancai ('three-color') Tang dynasty ceramics, where the white clay body was coated with coloured glazes and fired at a temperature of 800 degrees C ...
The china was considered to have a medium to high cost. [7] The glaze for the fine china line was developed by Max Compton with the shapes and patterns designed by Mary K. Grant, the design staff, and by contract designers. In 1942, World War II curtailed the introduction of new dinnerware lines and shapes. The Company continued to produce ware ...
Fǔ (簠): Rectangular dish, triangular in vertical cross-section. Always with a lid shaped like the dish. Zūn (尊 or 樽 or 鐏): Wine vessel and sacrificial vessel (器為盛酒亦祭用也). Tall cylindrical wine cup, with no handles or legs. The mouth is usually slightly broader than the body.
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission on Thursday recalled roughly 346,000 Cupkin Double-Walled Stainless Steel Children’s Cups because they “contain levels of lead that exceed the federal ...
Pedestal dishes or small trays with a stem with or without a lid are known as kalat for serving delicacies or offering flowers to royalty or the Buddha. Theatrical troupes and musicians have their lacquerware in costumes, masks, head-dresses, and musical instruments, some of them stored and carried in lacquer trunks. [ 44 ]
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