White Ceramic Vase Set 2 for Modern Home Decor. It has a unique doughnut shape and is perfect for displaying flowers or other decorative items. The set includes two vases, one large and one small, made of high-quality ceramic material. The smooth surface of the vases gives them a sleek and modern look that will complement any home decor style. The neutral colour of the vases makes them versatile and easy to incorporate into any room. Use them as a centrepiece on your dining table, or place them on a shelf to add a touch of elegance to your living space. These vases are not only beautiful but also functional, providing a stylish way to display your favourite flowers or plants. They are also easy to clean and maintain, making them a practical addition to any home. With their unique shape and timeless design, these ceramic vases will surely become a cherished part of your home decor collection for years to come.
More on Ceramic Art and Design
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Chinese Ceramics: Highlights of the Sir Percival David Collection
Outside of Asia, Sir Percival David amassed one of the best collections of Chinese ceramics. Many imperial-quality artifacts are included, including stunning specimens of highly rare Ru and guan ceramics, as well as the famed David vases. Read More →
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Eureka Pottery – American Ceramics manufacturer
The Eureka Pottery was the last commercial pottery constructed during the historic three decades during which potteries were established in Trenton. The company made the most beautiful majolica in Trenton. It was established in 1883 by Leon Weil, who Noah and Charles Boch succeeded. It was closed in 1887 due to fire, the constant enemy…
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British Art Pottery Manufacturer – Moorcroft
William Moorcroft started Moorcroft, a British art pottery manufacturer, in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, in 1913.Read More →
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Wedgwood 16 Piece Nantucket Basket Set, White
Elevate your dining experience with the Wedgwood Nantucket Basket 16-Piece Set. Made from fine bone china, this collection features an embossed basketweave pattern and includes dinner plates, salad plates, soup/cereal bowls, and mugs. Mix and match with other Wedgwood collections for a unique look. Dishwasher and microwave safe. Shop now and enjoy free shipping.Read More…
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Grethe Meyer (1918 – 2008) Danish architect, & designer of furniture & glassware
She worked on the editorial staff of The Building Manual from 1944 to 1955. She was a crucial figure in Borge Mogensen’s research on the standardisation of consumer product sizes, and she collaborated with him frequently. They created the Boligens Byggeskabe (BB) and resund cabinet-storage systems in 1957.Read More →
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Shenango China Company: A Legacy of Pottery and Porcelain Manufacturing
The Shenango China Company, active in New Castle, Pennsylvania, from 1901 to 1990, holds a significant place in American pottery and porcelain manufacturing. Specializing in tableware and furnishing articles for hotels and restaurants, the company gained recognition for its white or light green flower patterns inspired by céladon porcelain. Shenango China’s dedication to craftsmanship and…
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Josiah Wedgwood British Ceramics Manufacturer
He started by producing basic tableware, but by 1759, he had expanded to include beautiful items like classical vases and portrait busts. He was one of the first producers to hire artists to create product designs.Read More →
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Plateelbakkerij Ram (1921 – 1969) Arnhem-based Dutch Ceramics
Plateelbakkerij Ram (1921 – 1969) was an Arnhem-based Dutch ceramics company. Ram was founded in 1921 to produce high-quality ceramic bodies. At Ram 1921—25, Thomas A.C. Colenbrander was the designer for whom the company was established at the age of 80. Ram wares were sold at exhibition auctions as art rather than craft.Read More →
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Ernest Chaplet (1835 – 1909) French ceramicist and studio potter
Ernest Chaplet (1835 – 1909) was a French ceramicist, an early studio potter’ who mastered slip decoration, rediscovered stoneware, and conducted copper-red studies. From 1882 to 1885, he was the director of Charles Haviland’s workshop to study decorative processes, where he collaborated with artists such as Paul Gauguin. He eventually moved to Choisy-le-Roi, where he…
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Stunning White Ceramic Vase Modern Home Decor
The White Ceramic Vase Set 2 features a unique donut shape, two large and small vases, and is made of high-quality ceramic material. Its sleek, modern look complements any home decor style, and is easy to clean and maintain.Read More →
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The Workshop Guide to Ceramics – Book Shop
The Workshop Guide to Ceramics By Duncan Hooson and Anthony QuinnRead More →
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Discovering the Magic of Plateelbakkerij de Distel
Plateelbakkerij de Distel was a Dutch ceramics firm founded in 1895 in Amsterdam. It employed artists for both designing and painting, and produced art pottery, utility ware, tiles, ceramics for special events, and small sculptures. Exhibitions were held before WWI, including the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition.Read More →
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Fujina – Japanese Folk Pottery
Fujina pottery is made at Matsue, Shimane. 19th-century products include bluish-green tea bowls and white, yellow, or bluish-green domestic pottery. Later urban work promotes folk art.Read More →
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A Closer Look at Haviland, a French Porcelain Factory
Haviland was a French porcelain factory founded by American David Haviland in 1843 and operated until 1914. The Haviland family were skilled entrepreneurs and dedicated to their employees’ welfare, with a special fund to aid soldiers and their families, a mutual support fund, an association, social housing, and a programme for kids’ vacations.Read More →
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Kutani Porcelain Factory – Honshu, Japan
The Maeda family were hereditary feudal lords who founded and exclusively operated the Kutani Porcelain Factory, a privately owned Japanese factory in Kutani Mura, West Honshu, in the late cI7.Read More →
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What is Nottingham Earthenware Pottery?
Nottingham earthenware is English pottery from the thirteenth to the late eighteenth centuries. (The last authenticated piece was created in 1799.) Usually brown, with a faint metallic lustre. Often decorated with lines incised around the piece. Read More →
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Arzberg Porcelain – prestigious German design
Arzberg is regarded as one of the most prestigious porcelain design houses in the world. The definition of good design. Arzberg combines aesthetics, functionality, and durability.Read More →
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Otto Lindig (1895 – 1966) German Ceramicist
He was an enthusiastic supporter of the pottery workshop at the Bauhaus, contending that it should be included in the school’s curriculum. When it was separated into design and production workshops, Lindig supervised the latter, combining hand work and mass production approaches.Read More →
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Trude Petri-Raben (1906 – 1989) German Ceramicist
From 1927 she studied porcelain at Verinigdten Staatsshulen für freie und angewandte Kunst (United State Schools for Free and Applied Arts), Berlin, and Staatliche Porzellan-Manufakture, Berlin (Royal Porcelain Factory, Berlin).Read More →
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Grand Feu Art Pottery – California
Grand Feu Art Pottery, was founded in California by Cornelius Brauckman. Its output was of high quality and aesthetically distinctive. Generically, grand feu is ceramic ware fired at 2500°F (1400°C), maturing its body and glaze simultaneously. Grand feu is both porcelain and gres, and Grand Feu Art Pottery specialises in the latter.Read More →
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Blue-dash charger – Design Object
Blue-dash charger is a large circular earthenware dish made in England (especially Bristol and Lambeth) in the late 17th century and early 18th. The name derives from the dashes of blue around the rims.Read More →
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Thrown Pottery and the pottery wheel
The pottery wheel is a leading development in the world of craft and design that took some time to arrive.Read More →
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Gien Pottery Factory – Traditional Earthenwares
Gien Pottery. This company is often known simply as Gien Pottery, after its location in that city. It was established inRead More →
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Mintons – British Ceramics Firm
Thomas Minton bought a pottery in Stoke-on-Trent in 1793 and, in 1796, began production of inexpensive blue transfer-printed earthenware. His son Herbert Minton became director in 1836, expanded the range of wares, and hired artists. Read More →
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Lucien Levy Dhurmer (1865 – 1953) a French Ceramicist
Levy-Dhurmer may have been responsible for the rediscovery of the metallic lustre glaze technique used in Middle Eastern ceramics from the 9th century and in Hispano-Moresque pottery of the 15th century. However, the sheen on pieces by Massier and Levy-Dhunner has not lasted. He used primarily light-coloured earthenware with gold highlights and sombre-glazed stoneware. Read More…
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Dorodango Japanese polished dirt balls
The hand-rolling of this soil-based mixture can be relaxing and comfortable to do. Dorodango is not without its difficulties and needs a high degree of skill, patience and concentration. Given the fragility and inclination of the dorodango to break, the perfectly formed ball is elusive. It can also be a challenging process to achieve the…
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Charles John Noke (1858 – 1941) British ceramicist
He modelled vases (including Columbis and Diana) and figures from 1893 to 1898. (including Holbein and Rembrandt vases). With Cuthbert Bailey and John Slater, he experimented with the reproduction of Sung, Ming, and early Ch’ing dynasty blood-red rouge flambé and sang-de-boeuf glazes from the late 1890s to the early 1900sRead More →
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Marblehead Pottery (1904 – 1936) an American Pottery
Herbert J. Hall founded the Marblehead Pottery in 1904 as one of several “handcraft shops” that offered occupational therapy to “nervously worn outpatients.” The shops specialised in hand-weaving, woodcarving, and metalwork, with pottery being the most popular.Read More →
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Nora Gulbrandsen (1894 – 1978) Norwegian Designer
She was born to Aksel Julius Hanssen and Anna Sofie Lund in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway. From 1917 until 1922, she was married to wholesaler Carl Ziegler Gulbrandsen (1892–1976). She married Otto Delphin Amundsen, an engineer and genealogist, in 1943.Read More →
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Tea and coffee set by Marguerite Friedlander
She designed the Hallesche Form tea and coffee set for KPM in 1930, which was a huge commercial success, especially with Trude Petri’s gold rings (1931) decor.Read More →
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- Clay: Contemporary Ceramic Artisans (hardcover)
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