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- '''Burmantofts Pottery''' was the common trading name of a manufacturer of ceramic pipes and const *[http://www.postmaster.co.uk/~jason31/181469/index.html Burmatofts Pottery Shards]2 KB (343 words) - 09:19, 20 September 2010
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- ...pottery materials supply house for Bentonite. Find someone near who makes pottery. Ask them where they buy raw materials. You can buy clay already cleaned an [[Category:Pottery]]2 KB (339 words) - 20:16, 22 June 2010
- ...1982 || Art || Art consultant; author of ''Porcelain Through the Ages'', ''Pottery Through the Ages'', and other works || 5641 KB (5,585 words) - 12:32, 19 September 2010
- ...t was discovered that occasionally the daub was burnt, to be hardened like pottery. Hardened fragments of daub could be found in fresh daub coats, which Shaf13 KB (2,119 words) - 09:08, 20 September 2010
- Until the 1950s, the most important ceramic materials were (1) [[pottery]], [[brick]]s and [[tile]]s, (2) [[cement]]s and (3) [[glass]]. A [[composi *[http://www.madehow.com/Volume-4/Pottery.html How pottery is made]28 KB (3,876 words) - 09:08, 20 September 2010
- *[http://www.emmgraphics.com/pottery/orttip6.html Understanding Crazing] [[Category:Pottery]]4 KB (533 words) - 09:09, 20 September 2010
- ...city&mash;much as is done for [[tequila]] or [[Talavera (pottery)|Talavera pottery]].<ref name="piratechina"/>42 KB (6,562 words) - 09:16, 20 September 2010
- ...rs together to form a crystalline 'glaze' (not the amorphous layer seen in pottery) generally at high temperatures, from metallic surfaces sliding against eac32 KB (4,626 words) - 09:18, 20 September 2010
- ...ynthetic materials used for beadmaking have generally been [[ceramic]]s: [[pottery]] and [[glass]]. Beads were also made from the ancient alloys such as [[bro12 KB (1,784 words) - 09:18, 20 September 2010
- ...Modelling clays have been used by man for thousands of years to produce [[pottery]], buildings, and artistic sculptures. ...paperclay in the ceramic studio to make sculptural and functional [[studio pottery]]. Commercial air drying clay does not shrink noticeably when drying. This4 KB (602 words) - 09:18, 20 September 2010
- === Pottery === ...are an incense burner a tea-leaf jar and a funerary pot, summing up to 14 pottery items of which eight originated in China, five in Japan and one in Korea.102 KB (12,963 words) - 09:18, 20 September 2010
- '''Burmantofts Pottery''' was the common trading name of a manufacturer of ceramic pipes and const *[http://www.postmaster.co.uk/~jason31/181469/index.html Burmatofts Pottery Shards]2 KB (343 words) - 09:19, 20 September 2010
- *[[Burmantofts Pottery]]4 KB (543 words) - 09:19, 20 September 2010
- [[Category:Staffordshire pottery]]2 KB (333 words) - 09:19, 20 September 2010
- ...feet deep and the earth and ash therein contained [[Iron Age|Iron Age II]] pottery, from about the seventh century BCE.<ref name=BAR>{{cite web|title=Does the ...of coins and [[potsherd]]s, and modern debris had entered the site. A few pottery fragments from the end of the first century BCE to the first century CE fou10 KB (1,471 words) - 09:20, 20 September 2010
- ...History (Pliny)|Natural History]] describes its manufacture: "Even broken pottery has been utilized; it being found that, beaten to powder, and tempered with4 KB (575 words) - 09:20, 20 September 2010
- ...eel from the same material, possibly even by the same person, are called [[pottery]]; the choice of term depending on the type of object rather than the mater ...rths to harden, and finally [[kiln]]s were used, similar to those used for pottery today. However only after firing to high temperature would it be classed as10 KB (1,433 words) - 09:20, 20 September 2010
- ...s of reeds and twine. They were made in the [[Pre-Pottery Neolithic B|pre-pottery neolithic]] period, around 7200 BC. The fact that these sculptures have la5 KB (736 words) - 09:22, 20 September 2010
- Hemp use dates back to the [[Stone Age]], with hemp fibre imprints found in pottery shards in [[China]] and [[Taiwan]]<ref name=Stafford>Stafford, Peter. 1992.42 KB (6,310 words) - 21:11, 21 September 2010
- ..., and from there spread to much of the Islamic world, notably the [[İznik pottery]] of [[Turkey]] under the [[Ottoman Empire]] in the 16th and 17th centuries ...among tilemakers of the period were [[Ernest A. Batchelder]] and [[Pewabic Pottery]].18 KB (2,805 words) - 09:23, 20 September 2010
- ...zolans ([[trass]] or [[pumice]]) and artificial pozzolans (ground brick or pottery) in these concretes. Many excellent examples of structures made from these30 KB (4,351 words) - 09:23, 20 September 2010