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Rye Pottery, the Glossary

Index Rye Pottery

The Rye Pottery is a pottery in Rye, East Sussex, England, known as the Cadborough Pottery or "Rye Pottery" from its beginnings in c. 1834 to 1876, and Belle Vue Pottery from 1869 until it closed in 1939 (for a few years two locations were used).[1]

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Table of Contents

  1. 11 relations: Central School of Art and Design, Design Council, Festival of Britain, Hops, Llewellynn Jewitt, Plumstead, Rye, East Sussex, Slipware, Sprigging, The Canterbury Tales, Tin-glazed pottery.

  2. Art pottery

Central School of Art and Design

The Central School of Art and Design was a public school of fine and applied arts in London, England.

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Design Council

The Design Council, formerly the Council of Industrial Design, is a United Kingdom charity incorporated by royal charter.

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Festival of Britain

The Festival of Britain was a national exhibition and fair that reached millions of visitors throughout the United Kingdom in the summer of 1951.

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Hops

Hops are the flowers (also called seed cones or strobiles) of the hop plant Humulus lupulus, a member of the Cannabaceae family of flowering plants.

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Llewellynn Jewitt

Llewellynn Frederick William Jewitt (or Llewellyn) (24 November 1816 – 5 June 1886) was a British illustrator, engraver, natural scientist and author of The Ceramic Art of Great Britain (1878).

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Plumstead

Plumstead is an area in southeast London, within the Royal Borough of Greenwich, England.

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Rye, East Sussex

Rye is a town and civil parish in the Rother district of East Sussex, England, from the sea at the confluence of three rivers: the Rother, the Tillingham and the Brede.

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Slipware

Slipware is pottery identified by its primary decorating process where slip is placed onto the leather-hard (semi-hardened) clay body surface before firing by dipping, painting or splashing.

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Sprigging

Sprigging is the planting of sprigs, plant sections cut from rhizomes or stolons that includes crowns and roots, at spaced intervals in furrows or holes.

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The Canterbury Tales

The Canterbury Tales (Tales of Caunterbury) is a collection of twenty-four stories that runs to over 17,000 lines written in Middle English by Geoffrey Chaucer between 1387 and 1400.

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Tin-glazed pottery

Tin-glazed pottery is earthenware covered in lead glaze with added tin oxide which is white, shiny and opaque (see tin-glazing for the chemistry); usually this provides a background for brightly painted decoration.

See Rye Pottery and Tin-glazed pottery

See also

Art pottery

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rye_Pottery

Also known as Belle Vue Pottery, Cadborough Pottery.