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  2. 11 Vintage Cookie Jars Worth a Fortune - AOL

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    This adorable cookie jar is a 1950s collectible from RRP Co., a Roseville, Ohio, pottery company. Featuring a smiling moon, a cat and a fiddle, a dish and a spoon, and a lid that depicts a cow ...

  3. 10 Charming Vintage Cookie Jars That Are Worth Top Dollar

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    Aww, Baby Huey. The plump duckling was a popular cartoon star in the 1950s, and appeared on plenty of merchandise — including a now-pricey American Bisque cookie jar.

  4. These Charming Vintage Cookie Jars Are Worth Top Dollar

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    Shawnee Pottery, an American pottery company that operated from 1937 to 1961, is known for its eye-catching designs. Glazed inside and out, some Shawnee jars — like this Shawnee cottage cookie ...

  5. Pueblo pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_pottery

    Millicent Rogers Museum Hopi water canteen with kachina design, 1890, collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art Ancestral Pueblo, Flagstaff black on white double jar, AD 1100–1200 Pueblo pottery are ceramic objects made by the Indigenous Pueblo people and their antecedents, the Ancestral Puebloans and Mogollon cultures in the Southwestern ...

  6. Kamares ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamares_ware

    Such pots are typically decorated with combinations of abstract curvilinear designs and stylized plant and marine motifs which are painted in white and of red, orange, and yellow over the black background. Surviving examples include ridged cups, small, round spouted jars, and pithoi. [1] Cups from Phaistos, 1800 - 1700 BCE. Heraklion ...

  7. Fish plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_plate

    Although invented in fifth-century BC Athens, most of the corpus of surviving painted fish plates originate in Southern Italy, where fourth-century BC Greek settlers, called "Italiotes," manufactured them. The name "fish plate" comes from their usual decoration of seafood items which includes various fish and other marine creatures.