You searched for: teapot
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CeramicsTeapot / Queen's wareHMCMS:DA2006.53Teapot, creamware, Edme shape, printed factory and USA patent marks on base, made by Wedgwood, Barlaston, Staffordshire, c1940-1975Visit Page
the Edme tableware shape was designed by Wedgwood's art director, John E Goodwin, in collaboration with Pannier Freres of Paris, and first produced 1908-1909 -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2000.50Teapot, white stoneware, coloured blue under a salt glaze, globular shape with a crabstock handle and plain spout, not marked, made by Aaron Wedgwood or by Aaron Wedgwood in association with William Littler, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, c1745-1764Visit Page
it is believed that the ware known as Littler-Wedgwood blue was developed by the two men in a period of a few years either before or after William Littler's involvement in the Longton Hall porcelain factory, which lasted from 1751 to 1760
purchased with the aid of the National Art Collections Fund and Resource / Victoria and Albert Museum Purchase Grant Fund -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA2005.23Teapot, pale blue stoneware, globular shape with rouletted borders, some in-filled with white and dark brown slip, impressed factory marks inside foot-rim and around steam hole on inside of lid, made by Dudson Brothers, Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, c1900Visit Page
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CeramicsTableware / Advertisement / Teapot / Toast rack / Biscuit jarHMCMS:DA2006.48Tableware, teapot, toast rack and biscuit jar, white earthenware with solid blue glaze, to advertise Tetley's Tea, decorated with Tetley's Tea-Folk characters, the cover of the biscuit jar in the form of one of the characters peering out of the jar, made by Wade Potteries, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, c1985-1990Visit Page
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CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA1995.11.15Teapot, soft paste porcelain, lobed shape with loop handle and strawberry knop, painted pink ground and flowers in enamel colours overglaze, not marked, made at the Longton Hall porcelain factory, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, c1750-1760Visit Page
the main technical and creative partner at Longton Hall was William Littler, who later owned the porcelain factory at West Pans, near Musselburgh, and may at other times have been in partnership with Aaron Wedgwood in Burslem and Ralph Baddeley in Shelton -
CeramicsTeapotHMCMS:DA1995.11.23Teapot, soaprock porcelain, globular shape, decorated in Queen Charlotte pattern in underglaze blue with red and pink enamel colours and gold overglaze, square imitation seal mark in blue on base, made in Worcester, Hereford and Worcester, c1775Visit Page