Category: China

FLOW BLUE CHINA

Have you ever squinted your eyes while looking at a city’s lights from distance or an array of Christmas lights displayed before you and noticed the blurred beauty it can bring? That’s what happens with design where the blue color has slightly blurred the lines to create Flow Blue. It enhances the scene!

Flow Blue China and Porcelain Information & History by Schiffer Books gives great background on the beautiful product, ” Flow Blue china was made from the early 1800s until just after the turn of  the century. ..

Flow Blue Bowl

Henry Alcock Flow Blue Delamere Bowl on sale in Grandma’s Treasures Online

Since the 1700s, English pottery makers had tried to copy Chinese porcelain which exhibited many characteristics of what was to become known as Flow Blue. Chinese porcelain was quite expensive at the time as a luxury item. English potteries developed a type of salt-glaze earthenware which looked somewhat like porcelain due to the unique white hue that they produced. It could then be decorated with Chinese inspired designs and sold at much lower cost than Chinese porcelain. Transfer printing was invented around 1775 as a new method for decorating pottery. A copper plate was engraved with the design and warmed, at which point paint was rubbed onto the plate and any excess removed with a small knife. Damp tissue paper was then pressed carefully against the plate, then lifted up and pressed onto the pottery to which the transfer was being made. The transfer was then rubbed in using flannel after placing the pattern to be transferred in the correct position. Then, the piece was placed in water where the tissue paper floated off, leaving the design transferred to the piece. It was lightly heated to dry the paint, then glazed. While some firms had their own engravers who produced the designs, most smaller companies used engraving firms specializing in such services.

Because the Chinese porcelain that they were seeking to emulate had blue designs, the English also used blue, the only color they were certain would survive the glazing. The Staffordshire region had well over 100 potteries producing this ware by the early 1800s, originally pioneered by Josiah Spode. Cobalt oxide is the base pigment used in Flow Blue, discovered in the mid 1500s. They discovered that cobalt oxide dye would sink into the porous earthenware and blurred further during the glazing. Around 1820, they also discovered that the flow of the blue dye could be enhanced by using lime or ammonia chloride in the glazing process. The degree of blur varied greatly among manufacturers, and the flowing effect conveniently hid most manufacturing flaws in the blanks. Josiah Wedgwood is generally recognized as the creator of Flow Blue pottery in the 1820s. Early Flow Blue designs were mostly oriental although other scenics were also produced. Scenes of all types were usually romanticized visions of foreign lands, often mixing cultures and with the sole purpose to create desirability in the products. After 1850, styles became quite ornate and the scenes depicted even more fanciful. While some think that Flow Blue was discovered by accident, most experts believe that the development of the blurring technique and its use in production was quite intentional, a technique which produced works still in high demand today.”

Flow Blue Creamer

Flow Blue Cream Pitcher on sale in Grandma’s Treasures Online

Mary Frank Gaston the author of Collector’s Encyclopedia of Flow Blue China, Second Series, wrote from a 1993 vantage point noting that Flow Blue had experienced 10 years of steady incline of popularity.

Today if you search online you will find that Flow Blue china is still fetching strong prices.

 

Ladies – Spit in Style!

09englishspitoon1

You know all those vintage spittoons (or cuspidors as they are also called) that are adorned with pink roses, decorated optic glass or shiny iridescent glass, no man would dare to use them as they are too pretty! So, I am convinced the feminine spittoons were reserved for “ladies only” who could spit in style!

Back in the day, these fancy cuspidors were placed around hotel lobbies, in train cars, in parlors of homes and anywhere a ‘chewing/spitting’ lady might need such an accommodation.

Today, I’m thankful the scene has changed. We can collect tobacco memorabilia and use these pretty containers for flower pots or jewelry holders rather look down into a pool of black juice. ;-)

Grandma Treasures Online offers an unusual Vaseline Opal cuspidor made by Fenton in Carnival glass. The pattern is Frolicking Bear and it was the ‘souvenir’ of the 35th International Carnival Glass Association convention. It is quite rare as there were only enough produced for the attendees that year.

Do you have personal stories about a vintage spittoon? Or do you know any more history about ladies in the past and their spitting habits? Share with us!

 

“Made in Japan”

“Made in Japan” or “Japan” is an inscription or back stamp on china, figurines and ceramics that denotes quality and is associated with products that are are highly collectible. Historically, higher quality status of collectible items ‘made in Japan’ has proven stiff competition to global industry and has only increased since World War II, when stronger quality organizational processes were put in place.

So, we are not surprised that collectible value for items marked “Made in Japan” or other known backstamps from Japan, continues to rise.

The “Nippon Era” 1891-1921, the Art Nouveau Years. The first backstamped Japanese collectible ceramics were the hand painted Nippon pieces as result of the 1890 McKinley Tariff Act in America, requiring all imported goods to be marked with their country of origin.

‘Made in Japan’ ceramics is a big, big world of it’s own! These include all the figural and decorated objects exported to America mainly from 1921 to 1941. There was, of course, an interim of interrupted trade and markings of ‘Made in Japan’ after the US declared war on Japan in 1941, which basically resumed again in 1952.

The beginning of the ‘Made in Japan’ era ran simultaneous with the ‘Noritake Era’ of the Art Deco years (1921-1941). The biggest difference was the superior glaze quality of Noritake. They were considered the top of the line of export ceramic ware.

Noritake china plate NP-49 #88

Noritake china saucer (NP-49 #88), circa 1921-1941

If you are a collector of Noritake, we can recommend: The Collectors Encyclopedia of Occupied Japan – Volumes 2,4,5

Also: “The Collector’s Encyclopedia of Noritake”. We offer the 1st Edition 1984, with values updated from 1997.

From 1947-1952 was the “Occupied Japan” Era. Following World War II, a huge amount of ceramics was produced and exported to America from Japan. The Potsdam agreement permitted the Allied Powers to decide what Japan could manufacture during the Occupation. Ceramics passed the criteria. Most of these pieces were marked “Occupied Japan.” The Collector’s Encyclopedia of Occupied Japan five-volume series by Gene Florence is an excellent reference source on this topic. We offer a set that includes 2nd, 4th and 5th of this series.

To read more about what was made in Japan, The Collector’s Guide to Made in Japan Ceramics Books I and II by Carole Bess White, is a great resource!

For replacements or to complete a set, our Noritake cup and saucer in Dawn pattern is available!

Beautiful quality ceramics and ‘Japan’ marked somewhere on the item, just go together.  [Grandma's Treasures Online offers several pretty items "Made in Japan."]

 

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