- Museum number
- 2019.185
- Object
- Lobed oval dish (1 of pair), Bow Porcelain Factory, soft-paste porcelain, 1765-70
- Description
- the centres painted in puce, yellow, iron-red and blue with a bouquet of flowers within a moulded gilt oval cartouche surrrounded by moulded triangular panels within a deeply moulded trellis-pattern border reserved with panels of flower-sprays, iron-red anchor and dagger marks. 7 in wide.
- Materials
- soft-paste porcelain
- On display?
- No
Further description
- Simple name
- plate
- Dimensions
- 3cm (h) x 18cm (w)
Founded in the mid-1740s, the Bow factory, located in Bow, now East London, was the first English manufacturer to make porcelain on a commercial scale. Bow porcelain was largely aimed at the middle-classes. Famous for its imitations of imported Chinese and Japanese porcelain, the factory also produced some of the earliest full-length figures in English porcelain. From the 1760s the quality declined and the factory closed around 1774. The factory’s legacy lives on as its use of bone ash in the manufacture of porcelain evolved into what we know as English bone china.
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