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  2. American stoneware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Stoneware

    Stoneware bailed common jug with Albany slip glaze finish on the top, made in Red Wing, Goodhue County, Minnesota [1]. American Stoneware is a type of stoneware pottery popular in 19th century North America.

  3. Bartmann jug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bartmann_jug

    A Bartmann jug (from German Bartmann, "bearded man"), also called a Bellarmine jug, is a type of decorated salt-glazed stoneware that was manufactured in Europe throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, especially in the Cologne region, in what is today western Germany. The characteristic decorative detail is a bearded face mask appearing on the ...

  4. Toby Jug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toby_Jug

    A Toby Jug, also sometimes known as a Fillpot (or Philpot), is a pottery jug in the form of a seated person; whereas a character jug features the head of a recognizable person. Typically the seated figure is a heavy-set, jovial man holding a mug of beer in one hand and a pipe of tobacco in the other and wearing 18th-century attire: a long coat ...

  5. Salt glaze pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_glaze_pottery

    German Bartmann jug, c. 1600 Salt glazed containers. Salt-glaze or salt glaze pottery is pottery, usually stoneware, with a ceramic glaze of glossy, translucent and slightly orange-peel-like texture which was formed by throwing common salt into the kiln during the higher temperature part of the firing process.

  6. Face jug - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Face_jug

    A face jug is a jug pottery that depicts a face. There are examples in the pottery of ancient Greece , and that of Pre-Columbian America. Early European examples date from the 13th century, and the German stoneware Bartmann jug was a popular later medieval and Renaissance form.

  7. Ridgway Potteries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ridgway_Potteries

    Stoneware jug celebrating the Eglinton Tournament of 1839. From 1808 porcelain, that is to say bone china, was produced, in a great profusion of patterns, for which many of the pattern books survive. The styles are typical for the period, with many flowers, landscapes, and some modified Neoclassical and Chinese (or "Anglo-oriental") treatments.

  8. Liverpool porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liverpool_Porcelain

    Liverpool porcelain is mostly of the soft-paste porcelain type and was produced between about 1754 and 1804 in various factories in Liverpool. Tin-glazed English delftware had been produced in Liverpool from at least 1710 at numerous potteries, but some then switched to making porcelain.

  9. Rockingham Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rockingham_Pottery

    The Rockingham Pottery was a 19th-century manufacturer of porcelain of international repute, supplying fine wares and ornamental pieces to royalty and the aristocracy in Britain and overseas, as well as manufacturing porcelain and earthenware items for ordinary use.

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