creamware - definitie. Wat is creamware
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Wat (wie) is creamware - definitie

CREAM-COLOURED, REFINED EARTHENWARE WITH A LEAD GLAZE OVER A PALE BODY
Wedgwood Ware; Prattware; Pratt ware; Pearlware; Queen's ware; Terraglia
  • Josiah Wedgwood: Tea and coffee service, c. 1775. [[Transfer-printed]] in purple enamel by Guy Green of Liverpool. Victoria & Albert Museum, London
  • Jug, c. 1765 by the Pont-aux-Choux factory near Paris, one of the first and best French makers of ''faience fine'', as creamware was known.
  • Fragment of moulded 18th-century creamware found on Thames foreshore, central London, August 2017. Showing typical patterns of border decoration. Staffordshire, c. 1760–1780. Courtesy C Hobey.
  • Wedgwood ice-bucket (''glacier'') in three parts, 1770–1775, Queen's ware
  • Le Nove (Venetian) ''terraglia'' group, c. 1786
  • English [[loving-cup]], 1774

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COMPANY
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¦ noun glazed earthenware pottery of a rich cream colour.
Creamware         
COMPANY
CreamwareAudio Modular III; TripleDAT; CutMaster; Creamw@re; EasyCut; Pulsar (synthesizer); Scope (synthesizer); Creamware Audio GmbH; Creamware Audio; Creamware Pulsar; Frank Hund; CreamWare Audio GmbH; CreamWare Audio; Creamware (software company); CutMaster Swiff; Creamware.de; Www.creamware.de; CreamWare Datentechnik GmbH; CreamWare Datentechnik; Creamware Datentechnik; CreamWare (company); CreamWare; Creamware Datentechnik GmbH
Creamware is a cream-coloured refined earthenware with a lead glaze over a pale body, known in France as faïence fine,Tamara Préaud, curator. 1997.

Wikipedia

Creamware

Creamware is a cream-coloured refined earthenware with a lead glaze over a pale body, known in France as faïence fine, in the Netherlands as Engels porselein, and in Italy as terraglia inglese. It was created about 1750 by the potters of Staffordshire, England, who refined the materials and techniques of salt-glazed earthenware towards a finer, thinner, whiter body with a brilliant glassy lead glaze, which proved so ideal for domestic ware that it supplanted white salt-glaze wares by about 1780. It was popular until the 1840s.

Variations of creamware were known as "tortoiseshell ware" or "Whieldon ware" were developed by the master potter Thomas Whieldon with coloured stains under the glaze. It served as an inexpensive substitute for the soft-paste porcelains being developed by contemporary English manufactories, initially in competition with Chinese export porcelains. It was often made in the same fashionable and refined styles as porcelain.

The most notable producer of creamware was Josiah Wedgwood, who perfected the ware, beginning during his partnership with Thomas Whieldon. Wedgwood supplied his creamware to Queen Charlotte and Catherine the Great (in the famous Frog Service) and used the trade name Queen's ware. Later, around 1779, he was able to lighten the cream colour to a bluish white by using cobalt in the lead overglaze. Wedgwood sold this more desirable product under the name pearl ware. The Leeds Pottery (producing "Leedsware") was another very successful producer.

Wedgwood and his English competitors sold creamware throughout Europe, sparking local industries, that largely replaced tin-glazed faience. and to the United States. One contemporary writer and friend of Wedgwood claimed it was ubiquitous. This led to local industries developing throughout Europe to meet demand. There was also a strong export market to the United States. The success of creamware had killed the demand for tin-glazed earthenware and pewter vessels alike and the spread of cheap, good-quality, mass-produced creamware to Europe had a similar impact on Continental tin-glazed faience factories. By the 1780s Josiah Wedgwood was exporting as much as 80% of his output to Europe.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor creamware
1. He had, he later recorded, been a collector almost all his life, beginning in schooldays with caterpillars, stamps and war souvenirs, and moving on to Leeds creamware when he was a young lawyer.