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- Lead-glazed_earthenware abstract "Lead-glazed earthenware is one of the traditional types of glazed earthenware, which coat the ceramic body and render it impervious to liquids, as terracotta itself is not. The lead glaze is shiny and transparent after firing. Three other traditional techniques are tin-glazed earthenware, which coats the ware with an opaque white glaze suited for colored designs, salt-glazed earthenware such as stoneware, and the feldspathic glazes of Asian porcelain. Modern materials technology has invented new vitreous glazes that do not fall into these traditional categories.In lead glazes tints provided by impurities render greenish to brownish casts, with aesthetic possibilities that are not easily controlled in the kiln. The Romans used lead glazes for high-quality oil lamps and drinking cups. At the same time in China, green-glazed pottery dating back to the Han period (25-220 AD) gave rise eventually to the sancai or three-color Tang Dynasty ceramics, where the white clay body was coated with a layer of lead glaze and fired at a temperature of 800 degrees C. Lead oxide was the principal flux in the glaze; polychrome effects were obtained by using as coloring agents copper (which turns green), iron (which turns brownish yellow), and less often manganese and cobalt (which turns blue). Much of Roman technology was lost in the West, but coarse lead-glazed earthenwares were universal in medieval Europe and in Colonial America. In England, lead-glazed Stamford Ware was produced in Stamford, Lincolnshire as early as the ninth century. It was widely traded across Britain and the near continent. In Italy during the 15th century lead-glazed wares were improved by the incremental addition of tin oxides under the influence of Islamic wares imported through Sicily, giving rise to maiolica, which supplanted lead-glazed wares in all but the most rustic contexts. The French 16th-century Saint-Porchaire ware is lead-glazed earthenware; an early European attempt at rivalling Chinese porcelains, it does not properly qualify as faience, which is a refined tin-glazed earthenware. In 16th-century France Bernard Palissy refined lead-glazed earthenware to a high standard. Victorian majolica is a lead-glazed earthenware, introduced by Mintons in the mid-19th century as a revival of "Palissy ware".Lead-glazed earthenwares in Britain include the Toby jugs, such as those made in the late 18th century by Ralph Wood the Younger at Burslem, Staffordshire.".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware thumbnail WLA_ima_Saddled_Horse.jpg?width=300.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageID "45039267".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageLength "3615".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageOutDegree "33".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageRevisionID "682607893".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Bernard_Palissy.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ceramic_glazes.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pottery.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Cobalt.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Colonial_America.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Colonial_history_of_the_United_States.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Copper.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Earthenware.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Faience.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Feldspar.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Feldspath.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Flux.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Green-glazed_pottery.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Han_dynasty.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Han_period.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Iron.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Lead(II)_oxide.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Maiolica.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Manganese.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Materials_science.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Materials_technology.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Mintons.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Palissy_ware.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Porcelain.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Saint-Porchaire_ware.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Salt_glaze_pottery.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Sancai.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Stamford,_Lincolnshire.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Stamford_Ware.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Stoneware.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Tang_Dynasty.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Tang_dynasty.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Terracotta.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Tin-glazed_earthenware.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Tin-glazed_pottery.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Toby_Jug.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Toby_jug.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink Victorian_majolica.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink File:Pearlware_Toby_jug_VA_C42-1955.jpg.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLink File:WLA_ima_Saddled_Horse.jpg.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLinkText "Lead-glazed earthenware".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageWikiLinkText "lead-glazed earthenware".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware hasPhotoCollection Lead-glazed_earthenware.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware subject Category:Ceramic_glazes.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware subject Category:Pottery.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware hypernym Types.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware type MeanOfTransportation.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware comment "Lead-glazed earthenware is one of the traditional types of glazed earthenware, which coat the ceramic body and render it impervious to liquids, as terracotta itself is not. The lead glaze is shiny and transparent after firing. Three other traditional techniques are tin-glazed earthenware, which coats the ware with an opaque white glaze suited for colored designs, salt-glazed earthenware such as stoneware, and the feldspathic glazes of Asian porcelain.".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware label "Lead-glazed earthenware".
- Lead-glazed_earthenware sameAs m.012n9fkl.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware wasDerivedFrom Lead-glazed_earthenware?oldid=682607893.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware depiction WLA_ima_Saddled_Horse.jpg.
- Lead-glazed_earthenware isPrimaryTopicOf Lead-glazed_earthenware.