#ironstone
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Ladies’ Home Journal Book of Interior Decoration, 1959
#vintage#interior design#home#vintage interior#architecture#home decor#style#1950s#50s#dining room#plaid#blue#fireplace#dinnerware#Hitchcock chair#side chair#traditional#ironstone
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edward ironstone ♱
#ironstone#vampy#aesthetic#fashion#gothic#goth#goth aesthetic#gothcore#alternative goth#goth fashion#romantic goth#dark aesthetic#gothic fashion#gothic aesthetic#vampcore#vampy vibes#vampire aesthetic#vampiric#vamp goth#vamp aesthetic#vampirecore#vampire goth#web finds#goth subculture#alternative#vocalist#prog metal#progressive metal#men
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Banded Iron Formation
Here's a photo of a beautiful 3.4 Ga banded iron formation from the Barberton Geo Trail, South Africa. It's heavily weathered, but there was still some green underneath the oxides. Exposure is ~3m high. #Geology
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1850s Davenport Friburg Ironstone Stoneware Transferware Platter 💙
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Nobody asked but my HC for Seb's facial structure is basically this man.
instagram
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"what's your favorite band rn?"
Erm actually I love all of my cults equally thank you
(Don't make me choose)
Teehee
#help me its 5 am#kiss band#gvf#slaughter band#deep purple#maneskin#motley crue#rob zombie#korn band#palaye royale#cinderella band#bon jovi#Hozier#arctic monkeys#gorillaz#nine inch nails#guns n roses#megadeth#metallica#pink floyd#black sabbath#ozzy osbourne#deftones#fish in a birdcage#ironstone#trixter#faster pussycat#led zeppelin#the ramones#80's rock
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#vintage#pretty#blue#blue and white#collectibles#replacemt piece#cake stand#pottery#ironstone#loch#scotland
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https://www.instagram.com/gazaboohill/
https://www.gazaboo.etsy.com
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La patine et les fleurs ❤️
#artists on tumblr#home decor#cottagecore#table#nostalgia#vintage#faience#interior decorating#transferware#ironstone
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Poll 1
Poll 2
Poll 3
Other polls
Hopefully a 5/3 won't be necessary.
#polls#cornelia funke#inkheart trilogy#inkheart#inkspell#inkdeath#inkworld#ironstone#jasper#jacopo#despina#ivo#baptista#sootbird#the strong man#the white women#cloud dancer#fenoglio's grandchildren
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An Empty Shell.
#photographers on tumblr#old buildings#buildings#historic#church#churchyard#abandoned#derelict#urbex#rustic#ironstone#original photographers#vertical#landscape#lensblr
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A cute little billion year old coated grain that looks like a sprout. The grain is made of layers of Fe-clay that grew on the sea bed. Normally these grains are smooth but mine have unusual textures. I'm trying to figure out how these things formed. This little grain is about 1 mm across and is hosted in a shadow water sandstone.
#geology#palaeontology#geologyjohnson#fossils#precambrian#fossil#fossilfriday#paleontology#ooid#green#acritarch#iron formation#ironstone#sandstone
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Buy unique, antique, unusual, vintage, old…Buy Local! @sandwichantiquescenter Sandwich Antiques Center on 6A and Jarves. Last two days this year!! Closed December 25-31 reopening January 1, 2023! Featured in photo #1 is a complete child’s transfer ware “Apple” tea set, including covered tea pot, cream and covered sugar, six cups and saucers and waste bowl. Set displayed on a vintage cake stand. Photo #2 shows three White Rose Pert piece, two pitchers and a shaker. A third tiny creamer is also available but not pictured. Royal Doulton “Dinky Doo” is in the foreground. The last picture features just some of the available Depression Glass in this booth… syrups, “Dogwood luncheon set, candlesticks, a glass basket, dresser jar, pitchers and more, in pink, yellow, green, cobalt and clear. All are available for purchase. Sandwich Antiques Center open seven days a week, 10AM-5PM. December 24 is the last day of 2022 open, so come in tomorrow to find last minute gifts for friends and family. . . . . . #vintage #antiques #uniquevintage #sandwichmassachusetts #startanewtradition #buylocal #antiques #apple #ironstone #transferware #syrups #sandwichantiquescenter #depression glass #royaldoulton #hallchina (at Sandwich Antiques Center) https://www.instagram.com/p/CmiVM55Mz_o/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
#1#2#vintage#antiques#uniquevintage#sandwichmassachusetts#startanewtradition#buylocal#apple#ironstone#transferware#syrups#sandwichantiquescenter#depression#royaldoulton#hallchina
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✨ Education Corner with Lili, or 'Surprise! I was a ceramics historian before moving into funeral care!' ✨
Wanna know more about these gorgeous designs? Buckle up.
Starting strong at the top, we have a pattern known as 'Blue Willow'. I can't make out WHO made this particular one as the main identifiers are missing but I'll use Mason's as a baseline since they made the second plate in the image set.
Typically, a piece of Blue Willow would have looked something like this:
(Mason's, late 1800s - early 1900s and Churchill China, current production)
There are hundreds of willow designs, each subtly different, but most share defining features:
- A willow tree
- A bridge over water with two, three, or four people crossing
- Pagodas and temples
- A boat
- Two birds flying above the scene
The Willow design emerged in England in the 1790s as a response to the demand for traditional Chinese designs. Because why spend money shipping pottery from China when you could just make dupes at home and pocket the extra profit?
Nobody is quite sure who created the iconic design (which is why so many copycats were able to flourish, even to this day). Regardless, Blue Willow was a roaring success and every manufacturer wanted a piece of the pie.
Over time, the pattern developed a story to help sell it to the public. Songs and poems were written to celebrate Blue Willow and its supposed depiction of two star-crossed lovers such as this one from the Victorian period.
"Two pigeons flying high
Chinese vessel sailing by
Weeping willow hanging o’er
Bridge of three men maybe four
Chinese temples stand
Seem to take up all the land
Apple trees with apples on
A pretty fence to end my song"
To keep a competitive edge, Willow also became available in many colours, thought blue remained a favourite with buyers.
(Black Willow by Burleigh, 2010s & Pink Willow by Victoria Porcelain, 1940s-1950s)
Willow came in all shapes and manufacturing types; plates, jugs, tea sets, ironstone, earthenware, bone china. You name it, there's a willow for it out there.
While Willow fell out of fashion several years ago, a handful of manufacturers do still make this traditional design. However, the quality and methods of creation are (typically) very different to older pieces.
✨✨
The second plate, which is more identifiable, is a piece of ironstone from Mason's.
(Mason's, 1940s - 1950s)
Now this!! This beauty is called Vista and is all Mason's.
Vista was designed to emulate the feel of willow whilst standing as an independent design. Vista was designed and produced entirely in-house by the artists at Mason's in a beautiful shade of red.
The process of making these is labour intensive and extremely skilled work. Creating the means for mass production of this pattern alone may have taken years, being painstakingly engraved by hand onto giant rollers which would be used to create the final design transfers.
As far as I'm aware, only a single company in the world still uses the traditional decorating method that would have used to create Vista and that's Burleigh. This is what an engraved roller looks like:
(Burleigh, current production)
Even today, with the advent of laser technology, these cost thousands of pounds and take months to make. And they used to do that by hand!
Anyway, back to Vista!
Vista was Mason's own design, patented and manufactured only by them in the mid-1900s.
The type of pottery seen here is called ironstone (also ironware), which is a type of stoneware made using a specific blend of clay and feldspar.
The manufacturing of this design was only for a short period of time and was very much a labour of love. Each piece could take weeks to be created, with multiple stages of manufacturing needed.
When it came time to add the pattern, decorators weren't even allowed to touch a piece until they'd trained for several years.
Bonus fact: Decorators were almost always women! They would have worked in a dedicated section of the factory (called the decorating shop or transfer shop) and were treated very well around the factory for their level of skill.
(Yes, internal pottery politics existed. It still does and is actually kind of hilarious to witness in action.)
Classic designs like Vista really are gorgeous and if you ever come across intact ironware like the above, I recommend you buy it while you can and actively use it in your home!
This shit is STURDY.
It's heavy duty and will survive most drops, bumps and other household accidents. There's a level of quality in the creation that you rarely find in modern ceramics.
I'm not exaggerating when I say this will outlive most household items if taken care of.
The method used to get the design onto the pieces is called 'underglaze transferring' which means the design is set beneath a seal and is very hard to damage.
Many modern productions place designs onto the finished whitewear without an additional glaze to lock it in place. This eventually leads to the design scratching, fading and even peeling over time.
My own ironstone is from the 1960s and has survived over a dozen babies, crazy pets, several house moves, and more drops than I'm happy to admit to. But it's still going without a single scratch or chip or crack.
It's a trooper and I love it.
Jewelry made from broken china by OneCharmingTreasure.
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