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Maker(s):Leeds Pottery
Culture:English
Title:dish
Date Made:1780-1800
Type:Food Service
Materials:ceramic: lead-glazed cream-colored earthenware (creamware)
Place Made:United Kingdom; England; Great Britain: Yorkshire; Great Britain: Yorkshire, Leeds
Measurements:overall: 1 7/8 in x 12 in x 8 7/8 in; 4.7625 cm x 30.48 cm x 22.5425 cm
Accession Number:  HD 2006.33.20.1
Credit Line:Museum purchase with funds provided by Ray J. and Anne K. Groves
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield
2006-33-20-1_quickf.jpg

Description:
One of three English creamware elongated quatrefoil or oval, pierced dishes or stands, each with the same basic design but decorated with different openwork patterns. Each dish has a molded shell-edge rim; four winged female masks; festoons of husks; a variety of panels of openwork between the radiating ribs; and a plain well. The underside of this dish has an impressed "LEEDS POTTERY" mark. Enoch Booth (c.1703-1773) of Tunstall, England, developed the fine, light-colored earthenware now known as creamware in the early 1740s using the various improvements in body, glaze, and firing; but it was Josiah Wedgwood (1730-1795) who perfected and successfully marketed the ceramic body. Wedgwood’s version of creamware resulted from many experiments with white clays and improved glazes; by 1762, he had developed a light, sturdy, refined, and yet inexpensive cream-colored earthenware body. Wedgwood described the new product as "a species of earthenware for the table, quite new in appearance, covered with rich and brilliant glaze, bearing sudden alterations of heat and cold, manufactured with ease and expedition, and consequently cheap." Middle-class consumers rushed to purchase creamware, bringing the popularity of alternative ceramics such as tin-glazed earthenware and salt-glazed stoneware to an end. In an effort to capture a segment of the creamware market, many English potteries also began to produce the ceramic; estimates suggest that more than 150 factories in England manufactured the ware. Unfortunately most early wares were not marked, making attribution to a particular factory difficult.

Subjects:
Pottery; glaze (coating by location)

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https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+2006.33.20.1

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