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Polychrome Decoration:

Polychrome Decoration The polychrome decoration, which had been introduced in the Ming period and which was a process of painting enamel colors of various delicate shades on the original glazed piece of porcelain, produced the most glorious creations. The enamel paints were applied to the surface of the piece, which had already been glazed, and then the colors were made more permanent by means of refiring at a temperature lower than the original firing, as the enamel colors could not stand the high degree of heat necessary for firing the body of the piece itself.

The Ming dynasty (1368-1644). During the Ming dynasty all the arts received great encouragement from the emperors. The advancement in the making of porcelain was designated by a greater variety of beautiful colors. Plain-colored glazes, which had, in previous dynasties, furnished the chief decoration, were supplanted in popular favor by monochrome pattern decorations, although the plain glazes continued to be used side by side with more ornate pottery. New motifs such as birds and fish were added to the old floral patterns. This was the period of the blue-and-white porcelains, in which flower patterns in several shades of blue were placed on a cream-colored field and the whole covered with a glaze of a very faint bluish tinge. These were the porcelains that were popular with the Europeans and that had a great influence on English porcelain. Occa¬sionally the colors were reversed and white flowers were placed on a blue background. In the latter part of the Ming period, additional variety in the technique of color Decoration was developed, and the beginning of polychrome Decoration was evident in Ming enamelled ware and in Ming "three-color" ware, which took its name from its patterns wrought in the combinations of three colors. These colors were usually selected from a palette of dark violet-blue, turquoise, aubergine-purple, yellow, and white.

See Also Pottery Decoration That:

Hard-paste. A term applied by European potters to a pottery Decoration that clay made with a base of kaolin, a material used by the Chinese in making true porcelain, and not discovered in Europe until 1709. Luster. A pottery Decoration that Decoration producing metallic hues formed by thin layers of gold, copper, silver, etc. On-the-glaze colors. Refers to colors applied on top of glazed ware, such as the enamels used in majolica pottery Decoration that.

Great age of porcelains, jades, and cut stone, with elaboration of form and Decoration of pottery Decoration that. Extensive trade with Europe. The last two Chinese dynasties were those that greatly influenced Western art in the 18th century, because of the exportations of pottery Decoration that to England and France. The Ming dynasty (1368-1644). During the Ming dynasty all the arts received great encouragement from the emperors. The advancement in the making of porcelain was designated by a greater variety of beautiful colors. Plain-colored glazes, which had, in previous dynasties, furnished the chief decoration, were supplanted in popular favor by monochrome pattern decorations, although the plain glazes continued to be used side by side with more ornate pottery Decoration that. New motifs such as birds and fish were added to the old floral patterns. This was the period of the blue-and-white porcelains, in which flower patterns in several shades of blue were placed on a cream-colored field and the whole covered with a glaze of a very faint bluish tinge. These were the porcelains that were popular with the Europeans and that had a great influence on English porcelain. Occasionally the colors were reversed and white flowers were placed on a blue background. In the latter part of the Ming period, additional variety in the technique of color Decoration was developed, and the beginning of polychrome Decoration was evident in Ming enamelled ware and in Ming "three-color" ware, which took its name from its patterns wrought in the combinations of three colors. These colors were usually selected from a palette of dark violet-blue, turquoise, aubergine-purple, yellow,and white.


On The Other Hand See Barn Decoration:

Models, photographs, barn-building tools, examples of barn decoration, replicas of the intricate joinery that account for the remarkable stability of barns, farm journals, and architectural pattern books are among the artifacts that document barns' evolution from simple log structures to the large, often stately edifices that continue to be significant landmarks on the rural scene.

Models, photographs, barn-building tools, examples of barn decoration, replicas of the intricate joinery that account for the remarkable stability of barns, farm journals, and architectural pattern books are among the artifacts that document barns' evolution from simple log structures to the large, often stately edifices that continue to be significant landmarks on the rural scene.
 
 

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