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CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2005.46Teapot, earthenware, double-spouted, with relief-moulded feather and floral motifs, full Rockingham-type streaky brown glaze, not marked, probably Staffordshire, c1870-1900Visit Page
teapot was in use in late 19th century by donor's great-grandfather on farm in North Devon to take tea to workers in the fields
a perhaps deliberately comic effect is produced when the teapot is turned upside-down, turning the two spouts into a pair of legs -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2007.15Teapot, white stoneware with solid lustrous brown glaze, 'Pennine' pattern, two-diameter cylindrical shape with scales in low relief; printed factory mark and pattern name on base, made by Josiah Wedgwood and Sons, Barlaston, Staffordshire, c1963-1980Visit Page
the 'Pennine' range was designed by Wedgwood's Chief Modeller, Eric Owen in 1962 and first marketed in 1963 -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2002.11Teapot, stoneware with wood ash glaze, extended globular shape, painted leaf-form decoration in iron brown, impressed mark on lower handle terminal, three dots within letter C, made by Cairn Craft Pottery, Basingstoke, 1973Visit Page
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CeramicsSouvenir / TeapotHMCMS:DA2006.60Souvenir, in the form of a miniature teapot, porcelain, with printed and enamelled nominal arms of the town of Alton, a chequered shield superimposed on a crossed battleaxe and scimitar on a red field, marked 'BOTOLPH / JW & Co', probably J Wilson and Sons, Fenton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, c1900-1925Visit Page
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CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2001.13Teapot, white earthenware, Midwinter's Stylecraft shape, with a transfer-printed and enamelled cafe scene known as Riviera designed by Hugh Casson, comprehensive printed factory mark on base, made by W R Midwinter Ltd, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, c1955-1960Visit Page
Sir Hugh Casson RA designed Riviera and another continental scene, Cannes, for Midwinter in the early 1950s -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2005.40.10Teapot, buff stoneware, inverted pear shape, upper two-thirds dipped in green-brown mottled glaze with combed decoration, not marked, made by Tim Naylor, Brockweir, Gloucestershire, c1975-1985Visit Page
the glaze is said to incorporate sediment from the River Wye, which flows close to the site of the pottery