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  2. How to Use Collectible Christmas Plates for Your Best Holiday ...

    www.aol.com/collectible-christmas-plates-best...

    Blue Christmas Plates. Take cues from the icy-blue, white, and silver palette of a winter landscape to create a refreshing tablescape. When you set a table based on a single color—blue in this ...

  3. 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]

  4. 12 ways to make your home look like a Hallmark Christmas ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/12-ways-to-make-your-home...

    This fir comes pre-lit with more than 250 warm-white lights adorning its more than 756 branch tips to give it a full, lush appearance. Use the included controller to alternate between eight ...

  5. Delftware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delftware

    Today, Delfts Blauw (Delft Blue) is the brand name hand painted on the bottom of ceramic pieces identifying them as authentic and collectible. Although most Delft Blue borrows from the tin-glaze tradition, it is nearly all decorated in underglaze blue on a white clay body and very little uses tin glaze, a more expensive product.

  6. 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.

  7. Iznik pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iznik_pottery

    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 only documented vessel. The art historian Julian Raby has argued that the term is misleading as the ewer is atypical and has instead proposed the term 'Baba Nakkaş ware' after the name ...

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