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  2. Let's Make a Mug Too - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let's_Make_a_Mug_Too

    Let's Make a Mug Too (やくならマグカップも, Yaku nara Magu Kappu mo, lit. "If planning to fire (pottery), mug cup too") is a Japanese manga series by Osamu Kashiwara about Mino ware pottery, set in the Tajimi city of Gifu Prefecture. It has been serialized online by Planet since February 2012, and has been collected in thirty-four ...

  3. Pinch pot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinch_pot

    Pinch pots are the simplest and fastest way of making pottery, [1] simply by pinching the clay into shape by using thumb and fingers. Simple clay vessels such as bowls and cups of various sizes can be formed and shaped by hand using a methodical pinching process in which the clay walls are thinned by pinching them with thumb and forefinger. It ...

  4. Ash glaze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ash_glaze

    Ash glaze was the first glaze used in East Asia, and contained only ash, clay, and water. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] One of the ceramic fluxes in ash glazes is calcium oxide (CaO), commonly known as quicklime, and most ash glazes are part of the lime glaze family, not all of which use ash.

  5. Art pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_pottery

    Art pottery is a term for pottery with artistic aspirations, made in relatively small quantities, mostly between about 1870 and 1930. [1] Typically, sets of the usual tableware items are excluded from the term; instead the objects produced are mostly decorative vessels such as vases , jugs, bowls and the like which are sold singly.

  6. Japanese pottery and porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_pottery_and_porcelain

    Japanese pottery strongly influenced British studio potter Bernard Leach (1887–1979), who is regarded as the "Father of British studio pottery". [31] He lived in Japan from 1909 to 1920 during the Taishō period and became the leading western interpreter of Japanese pottery and in turn influenced a number of artists abroad.

  7. Slip casting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slip_casting

    As far back as the Roman Empire, potters created what is termed "Barbotine ware" by using clay slip to decorate the surface of pots. [39] " Barbotine pottery" is sometimes used for 19th-century French and American pottery with added slip cast decoration, [ 40 ] as well as (confusingly) 17th century English slipware that is decorated with thick ...

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  9. Ceramic art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramic_art

    Although pottery figurines are found from earlier periods in Europe, the oldest pottery vessels come from East Asia, with finds in China and Japan, then still linked by a land bridge, and some in what is now the Russian Far East, providing several from 20,000 to 10,000 BCE, although the vessels were simple utilitarian objects.