Description: With no Chinese porcelain protypes to copy, British ceramic tea canisters of the 18th century took several different forms. They are mostly, however, square or octagonal with a wide cylindrical lip, and seem to derive from the japanned metal canisters used for displaying and dispensing tea and coffee in grocers' shops. By contrast, smarter tea canisters of glass or silver tended to copy the wooden tea chest, complete with its wavy metal edging and corners. Only later in the century was the little baluster-shaped canister copied by English porcelain factories (for example, Worcester) which imitated Chinese vase-like versions made solely for export. English pearlware drum-shaped tea canister with an applied collar (missing llid) and spiral-fluted or swirl-molded) body; and decorated with band of underglaze blue decoration around shoulder, three dots of blue on side, and a thin blue band along the base rim. During her visit to HD on June 21, 1995, Louise Richardson attributed this canister to Thomas Harley (1778-1832) who produced earthenware jugs and other wares in his Lane End (now Longton) pottery from 1805-1812. Duckworth # M 90W
Subjects: Pottery; Enamel and enameling; glaze (coating by location) Link to share this object record: https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+90.179 |