No reference to any uphill traffic has been found, though return loads may have been consumables for the brickfields, potteries and coal mines. |
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A former art school student and classically-trained sculpture, Dave's studies took him to Grimsby, Harrow, and Staffordshire potteries. |
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There was a time I was on the phone to the potteries in Stoke every hour about these tiles. |
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Around 1770 there were five thousand workers employed in the potteries of England and Wales. |
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The nearby Jingdezhen potteries used the kaolin to create their fine white porcelain. |
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The patronage of a daimyo allowed the potteries to aim for the highest quality without regard to cost. |
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This was curtailed by persistent headaches, and upon leaving he worked for the two years to 1791 in his father's potteries. |
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By mid-century there were five potteries there, and a number of potters had migrated west to establish their own kilns. |
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Return loads may have been consumables for the brickfields, potteries and coal mines. |
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Bamboo, raw wood, the sparkle of a multitude of mirrors and the enamel of magnificent potteries from Anduze, preside over this timeless ambience. |
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The potteries and ceramics gives a magical atmosphere to this place where you are welcome for a visit. |
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The potters of this village are known since the mid 18th century for the production of utilitarian potteries. |
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Promotes the study and collection of pottery made at the Honiton and Crown Dorset potteries. |
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Three excavation pits in the village in the open air expose burials of these human with their utensils, potteries, ornaments and textiles. |
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All the potteries shown in this catalog are available both in red colour and ancient light colour. |
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What makes them unique and catch the special attraction of the visitors, is that they make potteries and textiles with their hands. |
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Art work, linen, sculptures, paint, furnitures, potteries, lighting, jewelleries, perfums and cosmetics. |
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These were common to potteries in the Deep South and are notable for the variety of colors they produced, from yellow and green to reddish and dark brown. |
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A critical juncture in his career was a four-month visit to Japan in 1876 and 1877, where he was able to tour potteries and religious sites that few Westerners had visited. |
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Dresser went to every part of that still mysterious country, visiting potteries, workers in wood and metal, artists, temples and the Emperor Meiji himself. |
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The production of commercial tableware began in the late 1800s, and by 1920 potteries had perfected a vitrified china which would not chip or stain in heavy use. |
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Studies of ceramics and other commodities show a substantial drop in imports and dominance of markets by such British centres of production as the Oxfordshire potteries. |
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Then she headed off to New Zealand and Australia to work in potteries. |
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For the past two hundred years scholars have been engaged in matching the maker's marks on objects to the potteries and estimating dates of manufacture. |
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In 1900 people were working in Hobsonville, in the potteries there. |
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In spite of the protective tariff levied on imported decorated ceramic wares, many American art potteries were unable to survive the influx of foreign wares. |
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Her Chateau de Bellevue was on the edge of the Meudon Forest, with a long view of the Seine Valley down to Paris, and with the Sevres potteries tucked under the escarpment. |
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Until about 1865 the products of Trenton potteries consisted almost entirely of heavy yellow and white earthenware and white graniteware of general shape and quality. |
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By then, the imperial potteries were in the hands of court eunuchs enjoying a greatly increased bureaucratic reach. |
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It is also thought that potteries persisted at Ayutthaya until the 18th century. |
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The Staffordshire potteries had a virtual monopoly, with the Davenport pottery being one of the most successful. |
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Truro's importance increased later in the 19th century and it had its own iron smelting works, potteries, and tanneries. |
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There is a unique similarity between petroglyph marks and prehistoric potteries as if all these works are done by a sole artist. |
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Hurghada, Marina Boulevard, oriental market: on the splendid new marina of Hurghada, here is a shop dedicated to the Egyptian potteries and our cotton and decoration products. |
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Our potteries resist the test of the dishwasher. |
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Children employed at glassworks were regularly burned and blinded, and those working at potteries were vulnerable to poisonous clay dust. |
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When that industry vanished it destroyed the clusters that had grown up around it, from firms making propellers to potteries making the china for first-class passengers' breakfast. |
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At its peak, it included a number of blast furnaces, a brick works, potteries, glass works, and rolling mills. |
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Modeling, cooking and the decor of these potteries are stayed primitive. |
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The wider potteries area is served by The Potteries website, which includes a number of articles and historical materials. |
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There have been fifteen potteries in the Ewenny area at one time or another, all small family concerns. |
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The Mino pottery was founded by KatÅ Yosabei, whose sons started other potteries in the vicinity, notably that under the aegis of the tea master Furuta Oribe Masashige. |
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At that time it had two olive oil mills, two potteries, three flour mills, a brandy distillery and the sugar mill that belonged to the Larios family. |
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Numerous factories, steelworks, collieries, and potteries were closed, including the renowned Shelton Bar steelworks. |
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By 1889, he had moved his business to Zanesville and by 1895 had turned to producing fancier wares, influenced by the success of the art potteries around him. |
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Little trace of feeling or originality remained to be lamented when, at the end of the eighteenth century, the Delftware potteries began to go out of business. |
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South Wales had several notable potteries, one of the first important sites being the Ewenny Pottery in Bridgend, which began producing earthenware in the 17th century. |
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This book shows how the Potteries became such a remarkable place and illustrates the traditional skills of the potters. |
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From the south, access from Congleton and the Potteries is from the A536, and via the A523 from Leek. |
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The canal connects the Trent to the Potteries and on to Runcorn and the Bridgewater Canal. |
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With the coming of the railway from Wareham to Swanage, most ball clay was dispatched by rail, often to the Potteries district of Staffordshire. |
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Attempts to create administrative counties for the Cinque Ports and Staffordshire Potteries were not successful. |
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It is situated at The Hive which is an extension to the Intu Potteries shopping centre. |
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Returning home from Minton's Staffordshire Potteries works one day, to his horror, he found that his maid had blackleaded the fireplace. |
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It will be located on the current site of the Potteries Pyramid, which will be moved to a nearby roundabout. |
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Portmeirion Potteries has since changed its company name to Portmeirion Group to reflect this acquisition. |
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On 31 January 1936, Orwell set out by public transport and on foot, reaching Manchester via Coventry, Stafford, the Potteries and Macclesfield. |
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On 23 April 2009, Portmeirion Potteries Ltd purchased Royal Worcester and Spode brands, after they had been placed into administration the previous November. |
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These two businesses were combined and Portmeirion Potteries was born. |
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There were outbreaks of serious violence, including property destruction and the ambushing of police convoys, in the Potteries and the West Riding. |
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Alan Povey's Owd Grandad Piggott stories which have aired on BBC Radio Stoke for a number of years are recited in the Potteries dialect by the author. |
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The unique environment of The Potteries was certainly an inspiration. |
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