Among the distinguished factories located there.
Staffordshire ceramic ware.
Liberty blue plate independence hall.
English ironstone indiana staffordshire art pottery.
Staffordshire tea cup in staffordshire art pottery.
Higher quality figures were made in porcelain and new ceramic materials like parian ware as well as some types of stoneware but in the 19th century staffordshire figure comes to denote specifically the cheaper earthenware types.
Porcelain was first made at longton hall c.
Staffordshire toby jug in staffordshire art pottery.
The geography of staffordshire in central england conspired to make it a center for slipware and other types of lead glazed earthenware.
Thick layers of clay lay only a few feet below the surface.
Abundance of local clays and coal gave rise to a concentration of pottery factories that made staffordshire one of the foremost pottery centres in europe.
In fact there was so much of the stuff within easy reach that 18th century potters routinely dug clay right out of the roads thus giving us the.
Probably the most recognized staffordshire porcelain would be blue ware or flow blue porcelain as pictured above although flow blue is more a process than a type of porcelain.
North staffordshire became a centre of ceramic production in the early 17th century due to the local availability of clay salt lead and coal.
Staffordshire ware lead glazed earthenware and unglazed or salt glazed stoneware made in staffordshire england from the 17th century onward.