Synoniemen & Anagrammen | Engels woord DELFTWARE


DELFTWARE

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Is palindroom

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ELF
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Voorbeelden van het gebruik van DELFTWARE in een zin

  • Delftware is one of the types of tin-glazed pottery or faience in which a white glaze is applied, usually decorated with metal oxides, in particular the cobalt oxide that gives the usual blue, and can withstand high firing temperatures, allowing it to be applied under the glaze.
  • Italian tin-glazed earthenware, at least the early forms, is called maiolica in English, Dutch wares are called Delftware, and their English equivalents English delftware, leaving "faience" as the normal term in English for French, German, Spanish, Portuguese wares and those of other countries not mentioned (it is also the usual French term, and fayence in German).
  • Tin-glazed pottery (see delftware) made at Delft and other Dutch towns adopted genuine blue-and-white Ming decoration from the early 17th century.
  • In France, maiolica developed as faience, in the Netherlands and England as delftware, and in Spain as talavera.
  • Archaeologists have recovered over 400 objects associated with the tower, and various Delftware drinking jars and an Iron Age sword are displayed inside, along with a set of historiated capitals, described by the historian Jeremy Ashbee as "important and rare examples of English Romanesque sculpture", originating from the Westminster Hall of the 1090s, and a set of weights and measures, on loan from the Science Museum.
  • Majolica, maiolica, delftware and faience are among the terms used for common types of tin-glazed pottery.
  • Includes Hispano-Moresque ware, Italian Renaissance maiolica (also called majolica), faience and Delftware.
  • Most styles in this group, such as Delftware, mostly used blue and white pottery decoration, but Italian maiolica was fully polychrome, using the range of in- and underglaze colours available.
  • It had long been, after London and together with Liverpool, one of the major centres of production for English pottery, especially tin-glazed English Delftware, some of which aspired to keep up with fashions in decoration such as chinoiserie.
  • Decorated with brush-painted enamels, tin-glazed earthenware from mid-15th century onwards has been known as maiolica, also later as faience, delftware, talavera, or rarely majolica, though commonly majolica in the US.
  • The development of white, or near white, firing bodies in Europe from the late 18th century, such as creamware by Josiah Wedgwood, and increasingly cheap European porcelain and Chinese export porcelain, reduced the demand for tin-glaze Delftware, faience and majolica.
  • Schama writes a quasi-anthropological study by utilizing the material culture such as the arts, engravings, illustrated books, delftware and bric-a-brac.
  • Porcelain: Capodimonte porcelain, 17th-century Chinese porcelain, Delftware, Chinese and Japanese porcelain dating to the nineteenth century; Limoges porcelain; works by the ceramist Pierre-Adrien Dalpayrat.



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