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  2. How to Cake It - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_To_Cake_It

    How to Cake It is a digital web show on YouTube that posts videos showcasing Yolanda Gampp creating cakes that look like other objects, as well as baking tutorials. Her cake designs have been featured on various websites and in magazines. How to Cake It has expanded to selling merchandise, [1] holding live workshops, and a second YouTube ...

  3. Pampered Chef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pampered_Chef

    Pampered Chef is a multinational multi-level marketing company [1] that offers a line of kitchen tools, food products, and cookbooks for preparing food in the home. It has a worldwide direct sales force of about 35,000 in addition to 400 corporate staff. [ 2 ]

  4. Restaurant ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restaurant_ware

    Stoneware and ironstone ware were popular choices for restaurants for their ability to withstand heavy use. Transfer designs also enabled some restaurants to set their tables with pieces bearing the business name or emblem.

  5. Conservation and restoration of ceramic objects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservation_and...

    Porcelain and stoneware are fired at the highest temperatures between 1200–1400°C or 2192–2552°F. Porcelain clay mixtures are fired to create a non-porous and very hard surface. [ 3 ] : p.98 However, the materials also create a very brittle surface which increases the potential for chips, cracks and breaks.

  6. Stoneware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stoneware

    Fine stoneware: made from more carefully selected, prepared, and blended raw materials. It is used to produce tableware and art ware. Chemical stoneware: used in the chemical industry, and when resistance to chemical attack is needed. Purer raw materials are used than for other stoneware bodies. Has largely been replaced by chemical porcelain. [10]

  7. Crock (dishware) - Wikipedia

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

    Crocks, or "preserving crocks", were used in household kitchens before refrigeration to hold and preserve foods such as butter, salted meats, and pickled vegetables. Crocks are made from stoneware, which is a nonporous ceramic that is water-tight, even without glaze. Larger crocks (20-30 gallons) are used for curing meats.

  8. Ironstone china - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ironstone_china

    A Syracuse China example of mid-20th-century restaurant ware made of ironstone china.. In the United States, ironstone ware was being manufactured from the 1850s onward. The earliest American ironstone potters were in operation around Trenton, New Jersey. [13]

  9. Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pottery

    Stoneware clay: Suitable for creating stoneware. Has many of the characteristics between fire clay and ball clay, having finer grain, like ball clay but is more heat resistant like fire clays. Common red clay and shale clay have vegetable and ferric oxide impurities which make them useful for bricks, but are generally unsatisfactory for pottery ...