enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: bisque porcelain vs antique nickel sink faucet reviews problems

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Biscuit porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biscuit_porcelain

    A popular use for biscuit porcelain was the manufacture of bisque dolls in the 19th century, where the porcelain was typically tinted or painted in flesh tones. In the doll world, "bisque" is usually the term used, rather than "biscuit". [4] Parian ware is a 19th-century type of biscuit. Lithophanes were normally made with biscuit.

  3. Biscuit (pottery) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biscuit_(pottery)

    This can be a final product such as biscuit porcelain or unglazed earthenware (such as terracotta) or, most commonly, an intermediate stage in a glazed final product. Confusingly, "biscuit" may also be used as a term for pottery at a stage in its manufacture where it has not yet been fired or glazed, but has been dried so that it is no longer ...

  4. Parian ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parian_ware

    Parian ware is a type of biscuit porcelain imitating marble. It was developed around 1845 by the Staffordshire pottery manufacturer Mintons, and named after Paros, the Greek island renowned for its fine-textured, white Parian marble, used since antiquity for sculpture. It was also contemporaneously referred to as Statuary Porcelain by

  5. Parian doll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parian_doll

    The proper descriptive term for these dolls is "bisque". These shoulder head dolls have a body made from fabrics and a head created from very lightly tinted or untinted white porcelain. Unlike the china doll however, the bisque doll's head is not dipped in glaze before firing and as such has a matte finish, giving it a markedly different ...

  6. Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Sanitary...

    The firm's brass finishing building in Louisville, Kentucky. The original Standard Sanitary was formed when James West Arrott of James West Arrott Insurance company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania took over a bankrupt hooper company that could not pay their insurance premiums.

  7. Bisque doll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bisque_doll

    A bisque doll or porcelain doll is a doll made partially or wholly out of bisque or biscuit porcelain. Bisque dolls are characterized by their realistic, skin-like matte finish. They had their peak of popularity between 1860 and 1900 with French and German dolls. Bisque dolls are collectible, and antique dolls can be worth thousands of dollars.

  1. Ads

    related to: bisque porcelain vs antique nickel sink faucet reviews problems