When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: starting a pottery business in kentucky

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Louisville Stoneware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louisville_Stoneware

    The company was founded in 1815 in Louisville, Kentucky, by Jacob Lewis and operated as Lewis Pottery. [4] It changed ownership many times in the following decades, and operated under various names including Bauer Pottery, Cherokee Pottery and Louisville Pottery, among others.

  3. Hadley Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadley_Pottery

    Hadley Pottery was exhibited by the American Craftsmen's Educational Council in 1947, and at the Ceramic National Exhibit at the Syracuse Museum of Fine Arts. [14] In 1952, Mary Alice Hadley received an award from the Museum of Modern Art's Good Design program [15] and her winning design, "Brown Dot" (or "Hot Brown Fleck"), was exhibited in New York and Chicago.

  4. Bybee Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bybee_Pottery

    Bybee Pottery was a pottery company based in Bybee, a community in Madison County, Kentucky, USA.It was founded in 1809 by Webster Cornelison and members of the same Cornelison family continued to make and sell pottery until 2011.

  5. Kenton Hills Porcelains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenton_Hills_Porcelains

    Nicholson, Nick & Marilyn Nicholson. "Kenton Hills Pottery: An Artistic Success but a Wartime Casualty" Journal of the American Art Pottery Association 12:10 (September/October 1996): 6–11. Payne, Warren & Julie Payne. Clear As Mud: Early 20th Century Kentucky Art Pottery (Paris, KY: Cane Ridge Publishing House), 2010. ISBN 0-6153-1093-1

  6. Rookwood Pottery Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rookwood_Pottery_Company

    Rookwood Pottery is an American ceramics company that was founded in 1880 and closed in 1967, before being revived in 2004. It was initially located in the Over-the-Rhine neighborhood in Cincinnati, Ohio , and has now returned there.

  7. Bauer Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bauer_Pottery

    In 1885, John Andrew "Andy" Bauer [3] bought out Frank Parham's Paducah Pottery in Paducah, Kentucky, a pottery whose main products were brown-glazed, hand-thrown wares including crocks and jugs. J.A. Bauer moved his family to Los Angeles in early 1909, and selected a new site for a pottery.

  1. Ad

    related to: starting a pottery business in kentucky