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New Art Ware Jardinière. c1903 (200 mm tall) Brown metallic finish Vase. 1924 (195 mm tall) Osborne Ware Jug with Pewter tilting cover. c1915 (190 mm tall) Turquoise and Cream Blossom Decoration Vases with combed glaze finish. 1915 & 1923(150 mm tall) Princess Ware Teaset.
Thomas Forester originally started a pottery business on Longton High Street, where his small workshop was based in 1877. As the business developed, Forester was said to have expanded his business within Longton, opening additional premises on Church Street called 'Church Street Majolica Works'. [2]
The local production of Etruscan vases probably began in the 7th century BC. Initially, the vases followed examples of black-figure vase painting from Corinth and East Greece. It is assumed that in the earliest phase, vases were produced mainly by immigrants from Greece. The first major style was so-called Pontic vase painting.
Attic black.glazed lekanis, circa 450/440 BC. Paris: Louvre. Application of an iron-rich clay slip (clay-paint) on the clay body of a skyphos, before firing. Contemporary black glaze pottery production at THETIS' workshop (Athens). Black-glazed ware is a type of ancient Greek fine pottery. The modern term describes vessels covered with a shiny ...
Heracles and Geryon on an Attic black-figured amphora with a thick layer of transparent gloss, c. 540 BC, now in the Munich State Collection of Antiquities.. Black-figure pottery painting (also known as black-figure style or black-figure ceramic; Ancient Greek: μελανόμορφα, romanized: melanómorpha) is one of the styles of painting on antique Greek vases.
Black & Grey Lustrous II Stroke Polished II "Cypro-Classical II" Ware: Vase with moulded ridges about neck, of unpainted clay (480–310 B.C.) Metropolitan Museum of Art
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