You searched for: teapot
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CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2006.22Teapot, cream-coloured earthenware, tapering drum shape, reed-moulded lid and knop, pale grey printed fabric-weave band of ornament around base, designed by Paul Costelloe, the Irish clothes designer, for Wedgwood, with Paul Costelloe printed facsimile signature, Wedgwood and copyright marks for 1999Visit Page
item is a second, as a result of an ill-fitting lid -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:HCMS1972.147Teapot, red earthenware, low round shape with snake-like spout, decorated with copper lustre and bands of pale blue slip, not marked, probably made in Staffordshire, c1810-1820Visit Page
spout derives from dragon-shape spouts on late 17th to early 18th century Chinese red stoneware pots -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2003.12Teapot, earthenware, mottled brown glaze, fluted drum shape with integrated spout and plain handle, not marked, probably Staffordshire, c1930Visit Page
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CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2006.20Teapot, cream-coloured earthenware, globular shape with parapet, decorated with a green and pink enamel painted border of rosebuds; base, painted pattern number A 544.. and impressed and printed factory marks, made by Wedgwood for James Powell and Sons, glass manufacturers, Whitefriars and china and glass merchants, Conduit Street, London, c1930Visit Page
James Powell and Sons first commissioned Wedgwood to make reproduction 18th century wares for sale at their Conduit Street premises c1910; teapot has impressed date mark for 1930 -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:HCMS1971.210Teapot, stoneware, inverted pear shape, with modelled floral decoration enamelled in white and turquoise, leaves outlined in gold, on impressed reticulated and linear grounds; several impressed, incised and painted marks on base including factory and assistants' marks, made by Doulton, Lambeth, London, c1890Visit Page
the mark DOULTON & SLATER'S PATENT refers to a method of impressing lace or fine netting onto the surface of the soft clay to achieve the surface texture seen here, it is also known as Chine-ware; of the impressed marks the three lower case 't's' perhaps indicate Senior Assistant Eleanor Tosen, the three lower case 'h's' Miss F Hewitt -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2002.72.15Teapot, hard paste porcelain, bullet shape with a ribbed wishbone handle, gaping bird's mouth spout and flower knop on lid, decorated with painted naturalistic flowers, not marked, made in Jingdezhen, Jiangxi province, China, c1760-1780Visit Page
the Chinese potter has faithfully copied the form of a Meissen teapot of about 1740-1750; the painted flowers, probably added in Guangzhou (Canton), mimic so-called deutsche blumen, a popular decorative style on European ceramics throughout the mid to late 18th century