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Underglaze is a method of decorating ceramic articles, the decoration is applied to the surface before it is glazed. Because the glaze will subsequently cover it such decoration is completely durable, but because the subsequent glost firing is at a higher temperature than used in on-glaze decoration the range of available colours is more limited. It uses pigments derived from oxides which fuse with the glaze when the piece is fired in a kiln. Examples include blue and white and İznik pottery. The first person to discover the technique in the United States was Mary Louise McLaughlin of Cincinnati, Ohio. Fixed Partial Denture, or Bridge The word ceramic is derived from the Greek word κεÏαμικÏÏ (keramikos). ...
In-glaze is a method of decorating ceramic articles, where the decoration is applied after it has been glazed. ...
In biology, pigment is any material resulting in color in plant or animal cells which is the result of selective absorption. ...
Composite body, painted, and glazed bottle. ...
Charcoal Kilns, California Gold Kiln, Victoria, Australia Hop kiln. ...
Blue and white wares: white pottery and porcelain wares decorated under the glaze with a blue pigment, generally cobalt oxide. ...
Iznik dish in saz and rosette style in the British Museums collection İznik pottery, named after the town in western Anatolia where it was made, is highly decorated ceramics whose heyday was the late sixteenth century. ...
Mary Louise McLaughlin (September 29, 1847 â January 19, 1939) was a ceramics painter and studio potter from Cincinnati, Ohio, and the main local competitor of Maria Longworth Nichols Storer, who founded Rookwood Pottery. ...
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References
Fournier, Robert, Illustrated Dictionary of Practical Pottery (Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1973) ISBN 0-442-29950-8 Hamer, Frank, and Hamer, Janet, The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Tecniques (A&C Black/University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004) ISBN 0-8122-3810-9
External links - More about underglaze blue printing in the North Staffordshire pottery industry
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