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The processes for underglaze and overglaze decoration were very different.
Overglaze colours in enamel were used from about 1768.
Around 1779, he was able to lighten the cream colour to a bluish white using cobalt in the lead overglaze.
She points out that the Chinese overglaze red often has a more orange tone than the Japanese red.
Hispano-Moresque wares use both processes, applying the paint as an overglaze which is then fired again.
New overglaze painting techniques from various kamamoto-es were infused in the development of kutaniyaki.
Decoration applied on top of a layer of glaze is referred to as overglaze.
The first potter named Kakiemon, or his son, is credited with establishing overglaze painting on porcelain in the last third of the 17th century.
The inner lip is smooth, with thin, whitish inductural overglaze in some specimens.
Overglaze colors are low-temperature glazes that give ceramics a more decorative, glassy look.
A piece is fired first, overglaze is applied, and it is fired again.
1960-70 - Stone chips refined; overglaze added.
Kinrande use underglaze blue and overglaze red and gold, and later some other colors.
China with overglaze decoration Gold and silver decoration may fade, so it's best to check this with the manufacturer.
China Paint and Overglaze
Decoration in blue and white is by far the most common, although many polychrome wares, mainly with iron red and green overglaze decorations, are known.
Kinrande Imari is colored porcelain with underglaze cobalt blue and overglaze red and gold.
A $90 set of three lidded canisters by Anita Gladstone is white and cream with a blue-gray decorative overglaze.
Overglaze "bat printing" on earthenware was a fairly straightforward process, and designs in a range of colours including black, red and lilac were produced.
English tin-glaze potters rarely used the transparent overglaze applied by the more sophisticated Dutch and Italian potters.
By the mid-1750s the Worcester porcelain factory was producing both underglaze prints in blue and overglaze prints, predominately in black.
Overglaze (W) See Enamel, above.
A light-coloured pottery body covered with a tin glaze with overglaze decorations in cobalt on the unfired glaze.
Sadler and Green printed in Liverpool, where their trade included overglaze printing on tin-glazed earthenware, porcelain, and creamware.
He was the first in Japan to practice overglaze enameling (applying enamel on top of the glazing), a technique developed in Kangxi China.