A local historian will be on hand to appraise examples of the pottery's slipware pots and talk about the history of any pieces brought to her. |
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A piece of 17th or 18th century north Italian slipware pottery was found close to a quay and could provide a date for its use. |
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More than 500 potters were working here, producing decorated and plain moulded pottery, mostly in the unmistakable red slipware. |
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Many of the dishes were served in Lebanese slipware bowls decorated with lovely brown and cream glazes. |
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The technique for making this marbled slipware is described in a source of 1677 in the ever engrossing notes. |
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Once we found a slipware owl which was apparently unique but, after the programme, five other owls turned up. |
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In 1946 he set up Ducketts Wood Pottery in Hertfordshire, where he produced slipware, tin-glaze and later mosaics. |
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Practically all the slipware I have begins to lose its glaze after a short time. |
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To manage to do that, you have to insert a slipware between the clay and the enamel, which will prevent the enamel from merging with the clay. |
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Its smooth shiny finish recalls the fine black slipware of ancient Etruria, while the globular body and pronounced lip recall Apulian geometric pottery. |
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He feels he is part of a community and sees his slipware in a historical continuum. |
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The Staffordshire potters were known for the excellence of their slipware, a kind of coarse earthenware decorated with a coloured clay and water mixture of creamlike consistency called slip. |
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There is a 17th-century Staffordshire slipware dish made to celebrate a marriage, for instance, crudely decorated with a man and a women holding bunches of flowers above their heads. |
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The Harappan culture continued to make painted and plain pottery, clean slipware and redware, with pinched and incised decorations. |
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Quirky plates Figurative ceramicist Philip Eglin has developed an exciting new body of work responding to 19th century slipware from the Buckley Collection at Aberystwyth. |
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