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  2. The Hall China Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hall_China_Company

    Hall China was founded on August 14, 1903, by Robert Hall, in the former West, Hardwick and George Pottery facility, following the dissolution of the two-year-old East Liverpool Potteries Company. He began making dinnerware and toilet seats, but soon found that institutional ware such as bedpans, chamber pots and pitchers was more profitable.

  3. Museum of Ceramics (East Liverpool, Ohio) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Ceramics_(East...

    The museum contains the largest public display of Lotus Ware, an award-winning fine porcelain ware produced only for a short period in the 1890s by the Knowles, Taylor, Knowles pottery of East Liverpool. [4] Also on display are collections of early Rockingham Pottery, ironstone, whiteware, yellow ware, and Victorian majolica.

  4. Yixing ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yixing_ware

    Five Yixing clay teapots showing a variety of styles from formal to whimsical. Yixing clay (simplified Chinese: 宜兴泥; traditional Chinese: 宜興泥; pinyin: Yíxīng ní; Wade–Giles: I-Hsing ni) is a type of clay from the region near the city of Yixing in Jiangsu Province, China, used in Chinese pottery since the Song dynasty (960–1279) when Yixing clay was first mined around China's ...

  5. Castleford Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castleford_Pottery

    Most pieces were teapots or accompanying milk jugs, sugar bowls and slop bowls (but not cups and saucers), and the shapes often derived from those used in contemporary silversmithing. [1] Group of Castleford-type teawares, c. 1805–1815. The pots at near left and middle centre have hinged lids, the one at back right a sliding lid.

  6. Yixing clay teapot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yixing_clay_teapot

    The first Yixing clay teapots were made in the 16th century by monks from the Jinsha Temple. Their use was popularized by Kung Ch'un, who became a servant in the house of Yixing tea master Wu Lun (1440-1522). [2] The new teapots soon became popular with the scholarly class, and the fame of Yixing teapots began to spread.

  7. James Sadler and Sons Ltd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Sadler_and_Sons_Ltd

    The early pre war racing car teapots were usually decorated with silver lustre and are marked "Made In England" with the design registration number 820236 impressed on the base. They were glazed in green, yellow, cream, black, blue, grey, pink and maroon. The licence plate reads "OKT42". [3]