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  2. Fashion plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fashion_plate

    Fashion plates should not be confused with costume plates. As outlined by the French social and cultural historian Daniel Roche, there was a point when depictions of costume and of fashion "diverged": [16] the latter came to depict clothes of the present day, while the former came to represent clothes "after the event", that is, after the epoch of the fashionable style.

  3. Plate (dishware) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plate_(dishware)

    A plate is a broad, mainly flat vessel on which food can be served. [1] A plate can also be used for ceremonial or decorative purposes. Most plates are circular, but they may be any shape, or made of any water-resistant material. Generally plates are raised round the edges, either by a curving up, or a wider lip or raised portion.

  4. Tableware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tableware

    Plates include charger plates as well as specific dinner plates, lunch plates, dessert plates, salad plates or side plates. Bowls include those used for soup, cereal, pasta, fruit or dessert. A range of saucers accompany plates and bowls, those designed to go with teacups, coffee cups, demitasses and cream soup bowls. There are also individual ...

  5. Ancient Roman pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Roman_pottery

    A cup, 65 mm high, made at Aswan, Egypt, in the 1st–2nd century AD, and decorated with barbotine patterns. Some of the shapes of Arretine plain wares were quite closely copied in the later 1st century BC and early 1st century AD in a class of pottery made in north-east Gaul and known as Gallo-Belgic ware. [15]

  6. Cabinet des Modes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabinet_des_Modes

    The magazine was preceded by the hugely expensive and exclusive Galerie des Modes et Costumes Français, which was published rarely and consisted of a series of decorative fashion plates, expanding on the fashion aspect idea of the almanach pocket books, which was popular during the 18th-century and normally contained one fashion plate each.

  7. Willow pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willow_pattern

    Blue Willow by Doris Gates (1940) [10] is a children's novel, a realist fictional account of the Dust Bowl and the Great Depression years that has been called "The Grapes of Wrath for children". [11] The eponymous Blue Willow plate, a gift from her great-grandmother, is the prized possession of Janey Larkin, the young daughter of a migrant ...

  8. Play Hearts Online for Free - AOL.com

    www.aol.com/games/play/masque-publishing/hearts

    Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!

  9. Oribe ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oribe_ware

    Oribe Black (Oribe-guro), early Edo period, c. 1620 Cornered bowl, Mino ware, Oribe type, early Edo period, 1600s. Oribe ware (also known as 織部焼 Oribe-yaki) is a style of Japanese pottery that first appeared in the sixteenth century.