SynonymsBot
Synonyms for porcelains or Related words with porcelains
stoneware
whitewares
earthenware
faience
glazes
chinaware
unglazed
redware
earthenwares
soapstone
feldspathic
enamels
majolica
porcelain
enamelling
stonewares
restoratives
pottery
silestone
micas
glasswork
stuccos
enameling
aluminoborate
hardstones
bisque
quartzes
celadon
veneerd
delftware
overglaze
vitablocs
pyroceram
whiteware
metalwork
jasperware
metalware
lepidolite
chamotte
lusterware
tsavorite
engobes
zodiaq
maiolica
jadeite
terrazzo
fireclay
corian
borosilicates
corningware
Examples of "porcelains"
White
porcelains
were preferred and praised than any other
porcelains
during the time to represent Korean Confucian ethics such as frugality and pragmatism.
He began as decorator and painter of
porcelains
in Delft (Netherlands).
The tradition of maiolica died away in the eighteenth century, under competition from inexpensive
porcelains
and white earthenware.
Joseon white porcelain or Joseon baekja refers to the white
porcelains
produced during the Joseon dynasty (1392-1910).
Blue and white Chinese
porcelains
from the 14th to 16th centuries have also been found in peasant houses in Syria.
Designs imitated imported Chinese and Japanese
porcelains
and the wares being produced at Chelsea, at the other end of London. Meissen figures were copied, both directly and indirectly through Chelsea. Quality was notoriously uneven; the warm, creamy body of Bow
porcelains
is glassy and the glaze tends towards ivory.
Kenton Hills
Porcelains
are high-fired soft paste porcelain products manufactured by Kenton Hills
Porcelains
, Inc. The company operated from 1940 to 1943 in Erlanger, Kentucky. All ceramic products were made from native clays. Products include vases, bookends, figurines, lamp bases, and flowerpots.
Under the auspices of the KPM workshop figurines
porcelains
of many different styles have been created in the last 250 years.
These
porcelains
that came from East Asia, especially China, were some of the finest quality porcelain wares. The earliest European
porcelains
were produced at the Meissen factory in the early 18th century; they were formed from a paste composed of kaolin and alabaster and fired at temperatures up to in a wood-fired kiln, producing a porcelain of great hardness, translucency, and strength. Later, the composition of the Meissen hard paste was changed and the alabaster was replaced by feldspar and quartz, allowing the pieces to be fired at lower temperatures. Kaolinite, feldspar and quartz (or other forms of silica) continue to constitute the basic ingredients for most continental European hard-paste
porcelains
.
Goryeo ware (고려도자기 ; Goryeo dojagi) refers to all types of Korean pottery and
porcelains
produced during the Goryeo dynasty. Goryeo most often however refers to celadon (greenware).
The Ding kilns in northern China began production early in the 8th century, where they produced sophisticated and beautiful
porcelains
and developed innovative kiln stacking and firing techniques.
Distribution of Kenton Hills
Porcelains
was under contract of Schoemaker & Company, Inc. of New York, serving as representatives of the company for outlet stores.
Joseon white
porcelains
are characterized by the beauty of unpretentious forms, understated decoration, and subtle use of color, reflecting the ideals of Korean Confucian state.
When Francesco died, his younger brother Cardinal Ferdinando de' Medici inherited the position of Grand Duke. Ferdinando brought his prized Chinese and Medici
porcelains
back with him to Florence from the Villa Medici in Rome, along with his paintings and treasured Roman antiquities. But with the ubiquity of European soft-paste and hard-paste
porcelains
in the eighteenth century, the Medici heirs in the House of Lorraine came to value less and less the imperfect Medici
porcelains
, with their minute firing cracks and bubbled glazes. In 1772 an auction in the Palazzo Vecchio of objects from storage dispersed the Medici
porcelains
conserved in Tuscany. The venture disappeared from history until interest revived after the mid-nineteenth century. The 1588 inventory drawn up after Francesco's death listed 310 pieces. Today only some sixty or seventy pieces are known to survive.
The National Museum of Ceramics and Decorative Arts "González Martí" (), located in Valencia, Spain, is a museum dedicated to ceramics (with special importance to Valencian ceramics),
porcelains
and other decorative arts such as textile art, traditional costumes and furniture.
The Guild’s extensive work on the
porcelains
of Drake and Cermeño along with those of other cargos from across the globe have firmly established that two different cargoes have been found at Drakes Bay native American sites.
AMOCA's Permanent Collection consists of more than 7,000 pieces and includes Southern California dinnerware, Mettach ceramics, industrial ceramics, factory made ceramics, ancient vessels from the Americas, fine
porcelains
of Asia and Europe, and functional and sculptural contemporary ceramics.
Cybis
porcelains
today are given as gifts of state and found in the permanent collections of museums, embassies, government buildings and art galleries around the world. Cybis Porcelain continues to manufacture fine china pieces at its Trenton, NJ studio.
The museum owns more than 10,000 pieces of Korean art including more than 3,000 earthenwares, 2,100
porcelains
, 1,100 celadons, 500 buncheongs, 2,000 paintings, 400 pieces of metal arts amongst many other items.
Steatite ceramics are low-cost biaxial
porcelains
of nominal composition (MgO)(SiO). Steatite is used primarily for its dielectric and thermal insulating properties in applications such as tile, substrates, washers, bushings, beads and pigments.