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Newmuse items tagged w/ porcelain

ItemOther Tags
diffuse.co.uk/ lamp ceramic
diffuselighting.wordpress.com/2010/12... Diffuse translucent
notcot.com/archives/2010/07/unwarping... unwrapping processing design
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limoges_porcela... lighting soft paste
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soft-paste_porc...
scabetti.co.uk/
yenrobinson.co.uk/wall.aspx paperclay
kafkadesign.de/en/
diffuse.co.uk
benzleporcelain.com/techniquetransluc...
Analysis: Position Graph

Context:

  • diffuse.co.uk/:
    • none
  • diffuselighting.wordpress.com/2010/12...:
    • @ 6: Home About Diffuse Diffuse's Blog Contemporary Porcelain Lighting Feeds: Posts Comments Tomasz
    • @ 109: richness and elegance of Diffuse’s Porcelain as a material. He was
  • notcot.com/archives/2010/07/unwarping...:
    • @ 1222: (6) popsugar (1) popup (3) porcelain (13) porsche (5) poster (12)
  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limoges_porcela...:
    • @ 502: (1853) Technologies Soft-paste porcelain · Hard-paste porcelain · Bone china · Factory mark People
    • @ 500:  · Zsolnay (1853) Technologies Soft-paste porcelain · Hard-paste porcelain · Bone china · Factory
    • @ 492:  · Revol (1789)  · Herend Porcelain Manufactory (1826)  · Zsolnay (1853)
    • @ 464: Plymouth (1748) · Worcester (1751) · Frankenthal Porcelain Factory (1755)  · Sèvres (1756) ·
    • @ 455: Mennecy (1745) · Bow (1747) · Nymphenburg Porcelain Manufactory (1747)  · Plymouth (1748) ·
    • @ 425: century) Europe French porcelain · Chinese porcelain in European painting Types: Fonthill
    • @ 423: Kutani (17th century) Europe French porcelain · Chinese porcelain in European painting
    • @ 410: Joseon (14th century) Japan Japanese porcelain Types: Imari (17th century) · Kakiemon
    • @ 403: Canton (18th century) Korea Korean porcelain Types: Joseon (14th century) Japan
    • @ 340: China Chinese porcelain · Chinese export porcelain · Chinese influences on Islamic pottery
    • @ 337: · e Porcelain China Chinese porcelain · Chinese export porcelain · Chinese influences
    • @ 334: v · d · e Porcelain China Chinese porcelain · Chinese export
    • @ 271: the premier manufacturing city of porcelain in France. [edit] Notes ^
    • @ 293: Gi Addison p.97ff See also Porcelain manufacturing companies in Europe [edit]
    • @ 190: hard-paste porcelain similar to Chinese porcelain. The manufactory at Limoges was
    • @ 141: 1730s. The manufacturing of hard-paste porcelain at Limoges was established by
    • @ 186: were used to produce hard-paste porcelain similar to Chinese porcelain. The
    • @ 46: d'Entrecolles Limoges porcelain designates hard-paste porcelain produced by factories near the
    • @ 43: (1789–present) Francois Xavier d'Entrecolles Limoges porcelain designates hard-paste porcelain produced by
    • @ 17: French porcelain Chocolate pot, Limoges porcelain. Rouen (1673–1696) Nevers Saint-Cloud (1693–1766)
    • @ 2: Limoges porcelain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    • @ 13: Jump to: navigation, search French porcelain Chocolate pot, Limoges porcelain. Rouen
    • @ 531: / Percival David Foundation · Dresden Porcelain Collection · Gardiner Museum (Toronto) · Kuskovo
    • @ 564: and Albert Museum (London) · Worcester Porcelain Museum This ceramic art and
    • @ 605: d · e Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Limoges_porcelain&oldid=441743723" Categories: Porcelain French pottery Ceramic
    • @ 607: e Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Limoges_porcelain&oldid=441743723" Categories: Porcelain French pottery Ceramic art and
  • en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soft-paste_porc...:
    • @ 2: Soft-paste porcelain From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    • @ 12: encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Porcelain plate, Chelsea, England, about 1765.
    • @ 38: and Albert Museum, London Soft-paste porcelain is a type of a
    • @ 60: is used to describe soft porcelains such as bone china, Seger
    • @ 66: such as bone china, Seger porcelain, vitreous porcelain, new Sèvres porcelain,
    • @ 68: bone china, Seger porcelain, vitreous porcelain, new Sèvres porcelain, Parian porcelain
    • @ 71: porcelain, vitreous porcelain, new Sèvres porcelain, Parian porcelain and soft feldspathic
    • @ 73: porcelain, new Sèvres porcelain, Parian porcelain and soft feldspathic porcelain,[2] and
    • @ 77: Parian porcelain and soft feldspathic porcelain,[2] and is also used more
    • @ 123: France 3.2 England 3.3 Hard-paste porcelain 4 Bibliography 5 See also
    • @ 138: [edit] General Saint-Cloud manufactory soft porcelain bowl, with blue decoration under
    • @ 150: 1700-1710. The history of soft-paste porcelain dates back to early attempts
    • @ 162: European potters to replicate Chinese porcelain at a time when its
    • @ 213: wares were not yet true porcelain as they were not hard
    • @ 279: and continue in production. Soft-paste porcelain is now used more narrowly
    • @ 294: mixed with glass frit. Medici porcelain was the first successful attempt
    • @ 308: make imitations of true Chinese porcelain. Produced between 1575 and 1587
    • @ 321: is a type of soft-paste porcelain, composed of white clay containing
    • @ 340: quartz[4][5]. Other early European soft-paste porcelain, also a frit porcelain, was
    • @ 344: soft-paste porcelain, also a frit porcelain, was produced at the Rouen
    • @ 360: known for this reason as "Porcelaine française".[6] Again, these were developed
    • @ 374: to imitate high-valued Chinese hard-paste porcelain.[6] As these early formulations suffered
    • @ 419: and other feldspathic rocks. Soft-paste porcelain with these ingredients was technically
    • @ 471: as "bodies"), such as electrical porcelain, are extremely plastic and can
    • @ 503: high temperatures compared to hard-paste porcelain. The feldspathic formulations are, however,
    • @ 524: at lower temperatures than hard-paste porcelain, typically around 1100oC[8][9] for the
    • @ 579: is more granular than hard-paste porcelain, less glass being formed in
    • @ 594: History of its manufacture Chinese porcelain, which arrived in Europe before
    • @ 647: powdered glass (frit), including the porcelain made in Florence in the
    • @ 676: alone.[11] [edit] France Further information: Porcelain of France Saint-Cloud manufactory soft
    • @ 682: of France Saint-Cloud manufactory soft porcelain vase, with blue designs under
    • @ 743: themselves rather to faience-making". Rouen porcelain, which is blue painted, is
    • @ 758: identify.[12] The first important French porcelain was made at the Saint-Cloud
    • @ 801: since 1693 to have made porcelain as "perfect as the Chinese".
    • @ 811: Chinese". The typical blue-painted Saint-Cloud porcelain, says Honey, "is one of
    • @ 823: most distinct and attractive of porcelains, and not the least part
    • @ 967: de Chantilly in 1730; Chantilly porcelain continued to be made after
    • @ 991: Barbin in 1750. The Vincennes porcelain factory was established in 1740
    • @ 1041: French rivals, which put Vincennes/Sèvres porcelain in the leading position in
    • @ 1190: out a patent on a porcelain containing bone ash. This was
    • @ 1241: observe the mixing of their porcelain.[16]. A partner in Longton Hall
    • @ 1255: Art, Secret or Mystery" of porcelain.[17] In the fifteen years after
    • @ 1288: St James's 1748 [22][23] Bristol porcelain 1748 Longton Hall 1750 [24]
    • @ 1302: Lowestoft 1757 [27][28] [edit] Hard-paste porcelain Hard-paste porcelain was successfully produced
    • @ 1304: [27][28] [edit] Hard-paste porcelain Hard-paste porcelain was successfully produced at Meissen
    • @ 1374: Paul (ed.), The History of Porcelain (Orbis, 1982) Bourry, E., A
    • @ 1391: & Son, 1926) Burton, William, Porcelain - Its Nature, Art and
    • @ 1437: Faber, 1952) Lane, Arthur, English Porcelain Figures of the 18th Century
    • @ 1462: P.W. and Reber, H., European Porcelain of the 18th Century (Phaidon,
    • @ 1491: F. Gouthier, 1983) Savage, George, Porcelain Through the Ages (Penguin Books,
    • @ 1517: (Davis Brothers, 1912) Wardell, Sasha, Porcelain and Bone China (Crowood Press,
    • @ 1528: 2004) [edit] See also Hard-paste porcelain Bone China [edit] References ^
    • @ 1534: Bone China [edit] References ^ "Porcelain plate". Ceramics. Victoria and Albert
    • @ 1570: Hamer p.273, A History of Porcelain, Honey, p.495, Lane, p.3, Leach,
    • @ 1585: pp.12-13, Savage (1963), p.181, Soft-paste Porcelain, Wardell, p.11 ^ Marco Spallanzani,
    • @ 1638: "On-site Raman analysis of Medici porcelain", Journal of Raman Spectroscopy, 35.1
    • @ 1651: a b Artificial Soft Paste Porcelain - France, Italy, Spain and
    • @ 1708: ^ ‘Science Of Early English Porcelain.’ I.C. Freestone. Sixth Conference and
    • @ 1732: ‘The Sites Of The Chelsea Porcelain Factory.’ E.Adams. Ceramics (1), 55,
    • @ 1760: Littler And The Origins Of Porcelain In Staffordshire.’ Cookson Mon. Bull.
    • @ 1791: publ 1956 ^ 'The Lowestoft Porcelain Factory, and the Chinese Porcelain
    • @ 1796: Porcelain Factory, and the Chinese Porcelain Made for the European Market
    • @ 1821: ^ [6] [edit] Resources Soft-paste porcelain Porcelain from continental Europe (images)
    • @ 1822: [6] [edit] Resources Soft-paste porcelain Porcelain from continental Europe (images) Chelsea
    • @ 1828: from continental Europe (images) Chelsea porcelain 1 Chelsea porcelain 2 St.
    • @ 1831: (images) Chelsea porcelain 1 Chelsea porcelain 2 St. James's porcelain Bow
    • @ 1835: Chelsea porcelain 2 St. James's porcelain Bow porcelain Other London porcelain
    • @ 1837: 2 St. James's porcelain Bow porcelain Other London porcelain Other British
    • @ 1840: porcelain Bow porcelain Other London porcelain Other British porcelain (images) v
    • @ 1843: Other London porcelain Other British porcelain (images) v d e Porcelain
    • @ 1848: porcelain (images) v d e Porcelain China Chinese porcelain · Chinese export
    • @ 1851: d e Porcelain China Chinese porcelain · Chinese export porcelain · Chinese influences
    • @ 1854: China Chinese porcelain · Chinese export porcelain · Chinese influences on Islamic pottery
    • @ 1917: Canton (18th century) Korea Korean porcelain Types: Joseon (14th century) Japan
    • @ 1924: Joseon (14th century) Japan Japanese porcelain Types: Imari (17th century) · Kakiemon
    • @ 1937: Kutani (17th century) Europe French porcelain · Chinese porcelain in European painting
    • @ 1939: century) Europe French porcelain · Chinese porcelain in European painting Types: Fonthill
    • @ 1969: Mennecy (1745) · Bow (1747) · Nymphenburg Porcelain Manufactory (1747)  · Plymouth (1748) ·
    • @ 1978: Plymouth (1748) · Worcester (1751) · Frankenthal Porcelain Factory (1755)  · Sèvres (1756) ·
    • @ 2006:  · Revol (1789)  · Herend Porcelain Manufactory (1826)  · Zsolnay (1853)
    • @ 2014:  · Zsolnay (1853) Technologies Soft-paste porcelain · Hard-paste porcelain · Bone china · Factory
    • @ 2016: (1853) Technologies Soft-paste porcelain · Hard-paste porcelain · Bone china · Factory mark People
    • @ 2045: / Percival David Foundation · Dresden Porcelain Collection · Gardiner Museum (Toronto) · Kuskovo
    • @ 2078: and Albert Museum (London) · Worcester Porcelain Museum Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Soft-paste_porcelain&oldid=455672201" Categories:
    • @ 2082: Worcester Porcelain Museum Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Soft-paste_porcelain&oldid=455672201" Categories: Ceramic materials Porcelain Pottery
    • @ 2086: from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Soft-paste_porcelain&oldid=455672201" Categories: Ceramic materials Porcelain Pottery History of ceramics British
  • scabetti.co.uk/:
    • none
  • yenrobinson.co.uk/wall.aspx:
    • @ 170: » "Vitis Interleaved" Wall Light Porcelain paperclay and stainless steel. Height:
    • @ 147: enquiry » "Meanders" Wall Light Porcelain paperclay and stainless steel. Height:
    • @ 125: enquiry » "Hellebores" Wall Light Porcelain paperclay and stainless steel. Height:
    • @ 103: » "Ground Elder" Wall Light Porcelain paperclay and stainless steel. Height:
    • @ 80: enquiry » "Gingko" Wall Light Porcelain paperclay and stainless steel. Height:
    • @ 58: "Allium" Wall Light (seasonal design) Porcelain paperclay and stainless steel. Height:
    • @ 34: supply them. "Alchemilla" Wall Light Porcelain paperclay and stainless steel. Height:
    • @ 11: content Wall Lights Low energy porcelain paperclay wall lights. Some patterns
  • kafkadesign.de/en/:
    • @ 3: [light & porcelain] DEU∣ENG products trou table pendular
  • diffuse.co.uk:
    • @ 16: Lighting designs and manufactures elegant porcelain lighting features which are timeless
    • @ 34: both classic and contemporary environments. Porcelains translucent light is ideal for
    • @ 215: project. Projects slide 1 Chandeliers Porcelain lighting features can impact upon
    • @ 248: The light emitted from translucent porcelain provides a warmth and softness
    • @ 271: into reception areas. Additionally – porcelain as a sculptural medium can
    • @ 349: across the interior . The porcelain that we make at Boatswain
    • @ 421: and frames an interior. The porcelain magic can be brought to
    • @ 527: delicate embossed detail. Large Paper Porcelain Small Paper Porcelain Shades slide
    • @ 530: Large Paper Porcelain Small Paper Porcelain Shades slide 4 Bespoke Production
    • @ 575: • A sample pack of porcelain tiles is supplied to suit
    • @ 742: to explore the material of porcelain and light. You will find
    • @ 795: our production unit. Clients Translucent porcelain naturally softens and diffuses light,
    • @ 822: and easy to clean, Boatswain porcelain does not tarnish or degrade
    • @ 844: made in the Far East, porcelain has been highly valued for
    • @ 862: these unique characteristics which make porcelain an ideal material for Boatswain
    • @ 877: lighting. Jason Boatswain has supplied Porcelain Lighting installations to the following
  • benzleporcelain.com/techniquetransluc...:
    • @ 56:           Thoughts on Translucence        Translucency in porcelain is a great example of
    • @ 73: one of the hallmarks of porcelain (along with density and “tone”
    • @ 198: technical observations on Translucency in Porcelain (with excerpts and paraphrasing from
    • @ 212: Robert Tinchane)        “Actually, making translucent porcelain is a complex situation.  It
    • @ 280: the paradox of making translucent porcelain.  The job can be attacked
    • @ 397: diminish translucency Crystals---The crystallinity of porcelain provides the structure that supports
    • @ 868: absorbed.        Obviously then, translucency in porcelain aims for an intermediate effect. 
    • @ 874: aims for an intermediate effect.  Porcelain shouldn’t be a transparent as
    • @ 958: it were a true translucent porcelain        From a practical standpoint, the
    • @ 971: way to look at translucent porcelain’s evolution is from the standpoint
    • @ 1107: apparent that we want a porcelain body to be lacier and
    • @ 1293: explanation is that translucency in porcelain is a very specific quality
    • @ 1309: illusive.  To obtain translucency in porcelain the artist must realize a

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