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  2. Franciscan Ceramics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franciscan_Ceramics

    The dinnerware design team designed the Madeira line of patterns, an innovative studio potter shape dinnerware. One of the companies top selling pattern on the Madeira shape designed by Rupert J. Deese was the pattern Madeira designed by Jerry Rothman with a dark glaze developed by Kathy Takemoto.

  3. Fiesta Tableware Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiesta_Tableware_Company

    Homer Laughlin began producing the popular and colorful Fiesta line of dinnerware in 1936. Fiesta dinnerware continued to be produced through the late 1960s, with a number of new colors offered before the entire line was phased out in 1973. Fiesta was re-introduced by the company in 1986 and remains in production. [11]

  4. Fiesta (dinnerware) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiesta_(dinnerware)

    New Fiesta in a store Contemporary Fiesta - 5 pieces for $45 in 2012. Fiesta is a line of ceramic glazed dinnerware manufactured and marketed by the Fiesta Tableware Company of Newell, West Virginia [1] [2] since its introduction in 1936, [1] with a hiatus from 1973 to 1985.

  5. Metlox Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metlox_Pottery

    Metlox Pottery was founded in 1927 by Theodor C. Prouty and his son Willis Prouty, originally as a producer of outdoor ceramic signs. After the death of T.C. in 1931, Willis renamed the company Metlox Pottery ("Metlox" is a combination of "metal" and "oxide," a reference to the glaze pigments), and began producing dinnerware.

  6. Portmeirion Pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portmeirion_Pottery

    Portmeirion Pottery began in 1960 when pottery designer Susan Williams-Ellis (daughter of Sir Clough Williams-Ellis, who created the Italian-style Portmeirion Village in North Wales) and her husband, Euan Cooper-Willis, took over a small pottery-decorating company in Stoke-on-Trent called A. E. Gray Ltd, also known as Gray's Pottery.

  7. Johnson Brothers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnson_Brothers

    Serving plate with flow blue transfer printing, c. 1890 Two versions of the "Britannia" lavatory bowl, 1890s - 1905. Johnson Brothers was a British tableware manufacturer and exporter that was noted for its early introduction of "semi-porcelain" tableware.