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Antique
Collecting:
Pottery And
Porcelain
English pottery
Page 1 of 3
The type of pottery described in the
previous chapter continued to be made in
all parts of England throughout the
seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries, and much is still being made
by the so-called studio potters.
Among the more important later centres
that have been identified with
certainty, are: London (known as
Metropolitan Ware)', Wrotham, Kent;
and Staffordshire, where the names of
Toft, Simpson and Malkin are the best
known. A further technique, known as
sgraffito and consisting of
decoration incised through a coating of
light-coloured slip to a dark body, was
practised in north Devonshire and other
places.
John
Astbury and Thomas Whieldon of
Staffordshire were the foremost potters
in the middle of the eighteenth century,
and their output comprised wares of all
the types that were then known. In
particular, Whieldon's name is linked
with wares with pale-coloured
transparent glazes including early
versions of the famous Toby Jug, and
similar types were made by Ralph Wood
and his son, also named Ralph. Astbury
is noted for pieces made from red clay,
either engine-turned on a lathe or with
white clay ornaments in relief. These
two men led the way to the perfecting of
lead-glazed pottery, a step which was
the achievement of Josiah Wedgwood.
Wedgwood was a good practical potter, he
had been for a few years in partnership
with Whieldon, but was a better business
man, and his cream-coloured lead-glazed
earthenware, known from 1765 as
Queen's Ware, was so successful that
it competed with porcelain, and was
imitated not only by other English
makers but also all over the Continent
of Europe. The closest imitator in
England was the factory at Leeds,
Yorkshire, which approached the high
quality of Wedgwood's products, but
often used original patterns. Much of
Wedgwood's creamware was decorated by
his own men in Staffordshire, or at a.
workshop he had for a time in London at
Chelsea, but a quantity was sent to
Liverpool to be ornamented by a newly
invented process. This was by means of
engravings printed on paper and
transferred to the china article; quick,
cheap and effective, it was typical of
Wedgwood to test the possibilities of
something as novel and promising. For
the collector it is reassuring to know
that the majority of Wedgwood ware is
marked.
Early
in the nineteenth century came the
introductions of pieces decorated with
lustre, both silver- and copper-coloured,
and there was a great variety among the
finished products. Silver lustre on a
canary-yellow ground is the rarest, but
silver in conjunction with underglaze
blue, especially if the latter is a
sporting subject, is sought after and
expensive. Whole tea-sets were made at
one period, each piece covered
completely with a thin film of silver
lustre, and they were a passable
imitation of the real thing for those
who could not afford to buy the genuine
metal. Copper-lustred pieces have been
made since about 1800 and production has
been continuous for some 150 years;
which explains why so many 'early
nineteenth-century' specimens are
obtainable.
Although creamware continued to be made,
white-glazed pottery was developed from
1780 to compete with porcelain and was
produced in great quantities by many
makers. At first it had decoration
printed solely in underglaze blue, but
later developments included a wide range
of colours. Whole services were made,
and Spode, Wedgwood and Davenport (all
of Staffordshire) were among the more
prominent of the hundreds of names
associated with it. The earlier
blue-printed ware is very well finished
and some of the patterns are most
attractive; a few, including the
willow-pattern, are still being made.
One
of the most popular introductions of the
first half of the nineteenth century was
ironstone china, said to contain
ironstone slag in its composition and
certainly very strong. The heavy ware,
almost unbreakable, was both cheap and
showy. It was made in the form of
domestic pieces with pseudo-oriental
decoration in vivid blues and reds, and
many of the big dinner-services are
still being used. Sets of jugs, with
handles in the shape of dragons, were
made also and are not uncommon.
A
style of decoration that is occasionally
seen, particularly on jugs and tankards,
is known as mocha, from a resemblance to
a type of quartz of that name, and has
brown moss-like blotches on it. The
stains were made with the aid of
tobacco-juice and hops, and doubtless
gave pleasure to the potters making it.
Children were catered for from about
1830 with small plates printed with
moral rhymes and other suitable
subjects. Many were made in
Staffordshire, but some came from
Stockton-on-Tees, Co. Durham.
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Page 2
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