FAIENCE - also spelled Faence, or Fayence, tin-glazed earthenware made in France, Germany, Spain, and Scandinavia.
Staffordshire salt glaze was imported first, …
FAIENCE FINE - fine white English lead-glazed earthenware, or creamware, imported into France from about 1730 onward.
POTTERY - one of the oldest and most widespread of the decorative arts, consisting of objects made of clay and hardened with ….
STONEWARE - pottery that has been fired at a high temperature (about 1,200 C ) until vitrified (that is, glasslike and impervious ….
TRANSFER PRINTING - method of decorating pottery by using an inked, engraved copperplate to make a print on paper that, while still wet, ….
The earliest known pottery, a soft earthenware … For practical and decorative purposes, it is usually glazed.
EARTHENWARE - stoneware and porcelain.
Creamware appealed to the middle class because of …
WEDGWOOD WARE - English stoneware made by Staffordshire factories originally established by Josiah Wedgwood.
3, 1795, Etruria, Staffordshire) British pottery designer and manufacturer.
WEDGWOOD, JOSIAH - (baptized July 12, 1730, Burslem, Staffordshire, Eng.
Merriam Webster Collegiate English Dictionary Pronunciation: ' kr ē m- ˌ wer Function: noun Date: 1780 : earthenware having a cream-colored glaze In …Įnglish-Russian Lingvistica'98 dictionary It was designed as a substitute for Chinese porcelain. Cream-coloured English earthenware made in the late 18th century. Staffordshire potters, experimenting in order …
CREAMWARE - cream-coloured English earthenware of the second half of the 18th century and its European imitations.
CREAMWARE - n (1780): earthenware having a cream-colored glaze.
CREAMWARE - ■ noun glazed earthenware pottery of a rich cream colour.
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate English vocabulary
CREAMWARE - noun Date: 1780 : earthenware having a cream-colored glaze.
glazed pottery of a creamy color that was first produced in Britain in approximately 1720 Webster's New International English Dictionary