Museum number
C371.42
Object
Shoe buckle, Wedgwood, jasperware with cut steel mounts, about 1790
Description
cAMEO. Late 18TH. Cent.Two pale blue plaques mounted in cut steel as clasp.Each plaque has two female figures in white.Rectangular in shape with corners cut off.Conservation: plaques cleaned with bread crumbs, ammonia and IMS, buckle with salvol antosol?draght, rinsed with IMS. Mary Greenacre, March 94.
Materials
Earthenware
On display?
Yes

Further description

Simple name
Cameo
Subject
Mythological
Dimensions
regular: 3.175cm (h) x 6.985cm (w)
Shoe buckle Jasperware with cut steel mounts, about 1790 C371.42 In 1772 the famous potter and entrepreneur Josiah Wedgwood (1730–95) opened a showroom in Westgate Buildings, Bath. The tables were covered with green baize, yellow ochre wallpaper set off the Black Basaltware and sea green paper was the background for his ‘pebble’ vases. Wedgwood had recognised the commercial opportunities when he brought his wife to the city but was also keenly aware of the competition. After two years he moved to smarter and larger premises in Milsom Street and advertised in the Bath Chronicle that he was selling: ‘Vases, Urns, Ewers, Bas-Reliefs, Cameos, Cameo-Medallions, Imitations of Porphyry, Jasper, Agate and other beautiful Stones, Pots for Flowers, Roots, bulbous Roots, Toilets, Pyramids etc with great Variety of Cypher-Seals... At the same prices as in their Warehouse in Greek-Street, Soho.’

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