ISBN: 0903101505
Author: Sheenah Smith
Language: English
Publisher: Norfolks Museums Service (1985)
Subcategory: No category
Rating: 4.6
Votes: 469
Size Fb2: 1393 kb
Size ePub: 1466 kb
Size Djvu: 1745 kb
Other formats: lrf lrf docx doc
Smith, Sheenah, Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum: Blue and White and Excavated Material, vo., and vol 2 Polychrome, 1975. Spencer, Christopher, Early Lowestoft: Study of the Early History and Products of the Lowestoft Porcelain Manufactory, 1981.
Smith, Sheenah, Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum: Blue and White and Excavated Material, vo. php?title Lowestoft Porcelain Factory&oldid 892476790".
Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Start by marking Lowestoft Porcelain In Norwich Castle Museum as Want to Read: Want to Read savin. ant to Read.
Home Smith, Sheenah Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum, Volume 2. .Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum, Volume 2: Polychrome. ISBN 10: 0903101505, ISBN 13: 9780903101509. Published by Norfolk Museums Service, Norfolk, England, 1985. Condition: Fine Hardcover. Please request quote for shipment outside USA.
Lowestoft Porcelain in the Norwich Castle Museum Vo. Polychrome by . mith. Early Lowestoft Porcelain by . pencer. Plymouth (1768-1770). William Cookworthy, a chemist in Plymouth, was the first to make hard paste porcelain in England. He found the two essential ingredients, kaolin and petunse or china clay and china stone on the property of Thomas Pitt. Crisp is mentioned several times in Cookworthy’s correspondence; whether Crisp was making porcelain in marketable quantities is unclear, and to what extent his connection with Cookworthy ran is also confused. Suffice it to say that there was some co-operation and advice between the two in the years 1767/8.
Sheenah Smith, Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum, Volume. 2, Polychrome, (Norwich, 1985), pl. 29A, no. 159. Other information.
Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum Volume 2 : Polychrome,Sheenah Sm. ENOCH WEDGWOOD (OLD CASTLE) Porcelain LOWESTOFT Pattern Set of 3 Demitasse Cup.
Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum Volume 2 : Polychrome,Sheenah Smi. EUR 8. 4. EUR 2. Illustrated Guide to Lowestoft Porcelain, Godden, Geoffrey . Very Good Book.
Sheenah Smith 'Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum' volume 1, pages 1-6: Hewling Luson Esq. was the owner of the Gunton Estate, just north of Lowestoft, where clay deposits were found by one of his tenants, Philip Walker
Sheenah Smith 'Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum' volume 1, pages 1-6: Hewling Luson Esq. was the owner of the Gunton Estate, just north of Lowestoft, where clay deposits were found by one of his tenants, Philip Walker. Walker and three others subsequently formed a partnership which went on to produce the porcelain we know today. Hewling Luson Senior was declared bankrupt in 1761 and died circa 1777
The East Anglian fishing port of Lowestoft, set far away from the other centres of 18thcentury porcelain production like . Lowestoft Porcelain in Norwich Castle Museum by Sheena Smith (Two Vols), Norwich Museum Services, 1985 ISBN MW0019879879.
The East Anglian fishing port of Lowestoft, set far away from the other centres of 18thcentury porcelain production like London, Staffordshire or Liverpool, began producing porcelain commercially in the late 1750s. It was very much a local concern and local is the best word to describe the scope of factory and its wares, the geographical spread of its original clientele and, by and large, the nature of its collecting base today.
The Lowestoft Porcelain Factory was a soft-paste porcelain factory on Crown Street in Lowestoft, Suffolk . Overglaze colours in enamel were used from about 1768, generally in white and blue or in a polychrome that utilizes a bright brick red. After 1770 transfer printing was used.
The Lowestoft Porcelain Factory was a soft-paste porcelain factory on Crown Street in Lowestoft, Suffolk, active from 1757 to 1802, producing domestic wares such as pots, teapots, and jugs, with shapes copied from silverwork or from Bow and Worcester porcelain.