stoneware
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
stoneware hard pottery made from siliceous paste, fired at high temperature to vitrify (make glassy) the body. Stoneware is heavier and more opaque than porcelain and differs from terra-cotta in being nonporous and nonabsorbent. The usual color of fired stoneware tends toward gray, though there may be a wide range of color, depending on the clay. It has been produced in China since ancient times and is the forerunner of Chinese porcelain. It is difficult to distinguish between early porcelaneous stoneware and true porcelain. During the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) a porcelainlike stoneware was developed with remarkable red and green glazes. In the 16th cent. it was extensively manufactured in Yixing in Jiangsu prov., which is notable for its unusual teapots of red, buff, or gray and glazed or enameled stoneware. In Europe stoneware was manufactured in the 12th cent. in Germany, especially in the north and on the lower Rhine. Early salt-glazed wares have been found at Aachen and Cologne; these grayish, blue, and brown wares were exported in quantity to the Lowlands and England. Dutch, Flemish, and German potteries of the late 14th cent. made a distinctive stoneware, known as Cologne ware or grès de Flandres, with stamped or profusely modeled decoration; most of the examples exhibit a lead glaze, though a cream-colored variety was usually left unglazed. In the 1670s, John Dwight started to make stoneware jugs and mugs in England and climaxed his work with remarkable figurines and portrait busts of porcelaneous stoneware. By the turn of the century a white salt-glazed ware was being widely produced in Staffordshire. In the last quarter of the 18th cent. Josiah Wedgwood invented and developed two stonewares that are still justly prized: basalt ware and jasper ware. Stoneware remains one of the most common forms of ceramics and is often employed in commercial and industrial products. See porcelain .
Author not available, STONEWARE.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Men's apparel prices at retail up 1.6 per cent in September.
Daily News Record; 10/25/1984; 391 words
; WASHINGTON (FNS) -- Retail prices for men's and boys' apparel in September increased 1.6 per cent from August prices and 2.5 per cent from September 1983 price levels, the Labor Department reported Wednesday. After adjustment for seasonal factors, lat month's prices were only 0.1 per cent higher
Read more
|
|
Fed: Inflation reaches three per cent=3
AAP General News (Australia); 10/26/2005; 194 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 10-26-2005 Fed: Inflation reaches three per cent=3 Transportation costs, which cover petrol, were up 5.9 per cent over ...
Read more
|
|
AAntofagasta 826p (up 26p 3.25 per cent) Miners lead [Derived headline]
The Independent - London; 10/6/2007; 277 words
; AAntofagasta 826p (up 26p, 3.25 per cent) Miners lead the top tier up as commodity prices stiffen. ACadbury Schweppes 600p (up 15p, 2.56 per cent) Sanford Bernstein reiterates "outperform" in anticipation of update next week. AWPP Group 691.5p (up 16.5p, 2.44 per cent) "Buy" recommendation from
Read more
|
|
ALonmin 3649p (up 251p 7.4 per cent) Traders speculate [Derived headline]
The Independent - London; 9/29/2007; 263 words
; ALonmin 3649p (up 251p, 7.4 per cent) Traders speculate on a potential takeover. AYell Group 429p (up 11.25p, 2.7 per cent) Exane BNP Paribas says "buy". ATullow Oil 596p (up 11p, 1.9 per cent) Stages rally after losses during its first few days on the top tier. AMarks & Spencer 615.5p (up 3p, 0.5
Read more
|
|
Fed: Unemployment falls to 4.9 per cent=2
AAP General News (Australia); 6/8/2006; 135 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 06-08-2006 Fed: Unemployment falls to 4.9 per cent=2 The fall in unemployment was largely due to NSW, where it dropped ...
Read more
|
|
Fed: Ag production down 17 per cent to $33 bln 02/03: ABS
AAP General News (Australia); 1/28/2004; 317 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 01-28-2004 Fed: Ag production down 17 per cent to $33 bln 02/03: ABS CANBERRA, Jan 28 AAP - The gross value of agricultural ...
Read more
|
|
Fed:Skilled vacancies rise 0.7 per cent in August =2
AAP General News (Australia); 8/22/2007; 266 words
; Fed:Skilled vacancies rise 0.7 per cent in August =2 The annual fall in the index was largely caused by an 11.3 per cent decline in professional vacancies, the DEWR said. Vacancies rose for two of the three broad occupation groups in August. Associate professionals were up 3.8 per cent and trades
Read more
|
|
Fed: Trade deficit down 36 per cent in May: ABS=2
AAP General News (Australia); 6/30/2003; 193 words
; 00-00-0000 Fed: Trade deficit down 36 per cent in May: ABS=2 The bureau said the value of rural exports slipped four per cent, or $68 million, to $1.8 billion. Wool and sheepskin sales fell 27 per cent, with exports of greasy wool down 36 per cent or $55 million. Meat products slipped three per
Read more
|
|
BOI office sees exports falling 8 per cent in dollar terms for 1998, NATION
The Nation (Thailand); 10/2/1998; 1080 words
; The Nation (Thailand) 10-02-1998 THE office of the Board of Investment forecasts that 1998 exports will decrease 8 per cent in dollar terms, continuing the downward trend from the first eight months which showed exports falling 5.4 per cent. However, in its report to the BOI's main board chaired by
Read more
|
|
Fed: GDP up 0.2 per cent in Sept quarter: ABS=2
AAP General News (Australia); 12/7/2005; 250 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 12-07-2005 Fed: GDP up 0.2 per cent in Sept quarter: ABS=2 There was a 0.5 per cent fall in real net national disposable ...
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
stoneware
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... glasslike and impervious to liquid). Because stoneware is nonporous, glaze is applied only for decoration. Stoneware originated in China 1400 and was exported ... 17th century. This red to dark-brown stoneware was copied in Germany, England, and the ...
Read more
|
|
pottery
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... main classes—porous-bodied pottery, stoneware , and porcelain . Raw clay is transformed ... shape and does not disintegrate in water. Stoneware is produced by raising the temperature ... 15th cent., except perhaps some German stonewares. Majolica was mainly developed in Italy ...
Read more
|
|
Wedgwood ware
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
English stoneware made by Staffordshire factories originally ... Black basaltes (from 1768), unglazed stoneware of fine texture that was ideal for imitating ... from 1775), a white, matte, unglazed stoneware that could be stained. White ornaments ...
Read more
|
|
earthenware
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
form of pottery fired at relatively low temperatures, so that the clay does not vitrify (become glassy), as do stoneware and porcelain clays. Occasionally, earthenware is used as a general term for all kinds of pottery.
Read more
|
|
ceramics
World Encyclopedia
... baked. Earthenware, terracotta, brick, tile, faience, majolica, stoneware, and porcelain are all ceramics. Ceramic ware is ornamented by ... refinements. Chinese porcelain dates from the T'ang dynasty, and Chinese stoneware goes back to c. 3000 bc.
Read more
|