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Showing posts with label transferware. Show all posts
Showing posts with label transferware. Show all posts

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Auction Day


I worked an auction on Wednesday and brought home a few
interesting things....

  1. A vintage French Country hen...rather large...she's ceramic and painted white.  She looks nice on top of my china cabinet, I think!
  2. A mint-condition gardening keepsake book by one of my favorite artists, Marjolein Bastin.  
  3. I do love her art and as I flipped through the book, I noticed how much she's influenced my own style of drawing!
  4. This pitcher and bowl were in a box that I paid 25 cents for.  I love transferware and thought it was too pretty for the trash.  Nobody was going to bid on it because the pitcher has a chip.  It's fun to be clerking and if nobody is going to take it, offer to bid myself. haha.  It was too pretty to throw away!
  5. I did find this bushel basket in the trash...just in time to bring in veggies from the garden.  Nice to get practical things there, too! 
  6. I think the transferware looks nice with this pillow I have in the living room!  
  7. Oh, and Mrs. Hen had her mate, Mr. Rooster with her!  He's a whopping 26" tall!  I like the way he looks with my vintage white ironwork hanging above the window.  I actually bid on the cute couple.  Taylor pronounced them 'hideous'. lol.  I should wrap them up for a wedding present next summer, don't you think?  :)
  


Friday, May 9, 2008

Transferware

I've always loved transferware and thought I'd do a little history
on these pretty dishes.Transferware is a pottery decorating
process invented about 200 years ago.
Potters learned to transfer a pattern from an engraved
metal plate to china. When the item is heated in a kiln
the pattern ingredients fuse with the surface and the
pattern becomes a permanent part of the china.
The variety of colors and patterns are endless. British potters invented the transferware process and had the market tied up for all of the 1800s because no one else could compete on quality and price. Their potteries were exported to America in vast quantities... as much as 250,000 pieces in a single shipload. The fraction that survive today give us a unique physical link with our forebears. Staffordshire Romantic transferware, with classical, oriental, and scenic themes is the most sought after category and was mostly made in the 1830's to 1850's. I have collected mostly blue transferware but would like to have more brown and red. There is green, also, which is very pretty. Flow Blu, pictured above, is simply a modified transferware process. The molten pattern ingredients were encouraged to bleed into the surrounding areas to form a halo effect. It was attractive as well as hiding minor faults. Flow Blue is avidly collected in the USA. The first picture at the top is Mason's Blue and White China sold by Crabtree & Evelyn. I have a china cabinet full of it! Not antiques, but I love the pattern of old cabbage roses. But my favorites are the old, old pieces...the ones that have yellowed and aged with time and use. :) info wiki, ebay and google.