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barbotine การใช้

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  • The Egyptians were known to have used barbotine design.
  • The first barbotine technique in pottery styling was in use in the ancient world.
  • The term " Barbotine ware " also describes the American art pottery that emulated the Haviland pottery.
  • Where decoration occurs it includes barbotine ( both under and over the slip ), rouletting and grooving.
  • Slip or barbotine is cast in moulds to form three-dimensional decorative sections which when dried out are added to the main vessel.
  • Surface decoration of ARS is relatively simple during the first three centuries of production, with occasional rouletting, barbotine motifs and some appliqu?being typical.
  • Hunt scenes in barbotine decoration are well known from the earlier part of the industry, with the use of whorls instead of these beginning in the 3rd Century AD.
  • They had surface dwellings, medium-sized ( 3x4m ) with a rectangular layout, and pottery displays mainly high-necked pots with a short bottom portion often decorated with barbotine.
  • The second technique is a term for slipcasting, " couler en barbotine " in French . " Barbotine pottery " is sometimes used for 19th-century French and American pottery with added slipcast decoration.
  • The second technique is a term for slipcasting, " couler en barbotine " in French . " Barbotine pottery " is sometimes used for 19th-century French and American pottery with added slipcast decoration.
  • With the help of Morris, but also Franquin, Peyo and Remacle, Leonardo created the comics series " Barbotine " which allowed him to be hired by " Spirou " magazine.
  • But the real strength of the Rheinzabern industry lay in its extensive production of good-quality samian cups, beakers, flagons and vases, many imaginatively decorated with barbotine designs or in the'cut-glass'incised technique.
  • Two standard'plain'types made in considerable numbers in Central Gaul also included barbotine decoration, Dr . 35 and 36, a matching cup and dish with a curved horizontal rim embellished with a stylised scroll of leaves in relief.
  • As another example, archaeological recovery at Minoan Knossos on the island of Crete in present-day Greece reveals barbotine pottery specimens, and it is common in Ancient Roman pottery, where the colour may often be the same as the rest of the vessel.
  • The French for slip is barbotine ( " Coul閑 en barbotine " is slipcasting ), and " barbotine pottery " is sometimes used for 19th century French and American pottery with added slipcast decoration, as well as ( confusingly ) being the English term for a variety of slipware that is decorated with thick blobs of slip.
  • The French for slip is barbotine ( " Coul閑 en barbotine " is slipcasting ), and " barbotine pottery " is sometimes used for 19th century French and American pottery with added slipcast decoration, as well as ( confusingly ) being the English term for a variety of slipware that is decorated with thick blobs of slip.
  • The French for slip is barbotine ( " Coul閑 en barbotine " is slipcasting ), and " barbotine pottery " is sometimes used for 19th century French and American pottery with added slipcast decoration, as well as ( confusingly ) being the English term for a variety of slipware that is decorated with thick blobs of slip.
  • Figure-types and decorative details have been classified, and can often be linked to specific workshops Lezoux wares also included vases decorated with barbotine relief, with appliqu?motifs, and a class usually referred to as'cut-glass'decoration, with geometric patterns cut into the surface of the vessel before slipping and firing.
  • Principal techniques include "'slip-painting "', where the slip is treated like paint and used to create a design with brushes or other implements, and "'slip-trailing "'( or barbotine decoration ), where the slip, usually rather thick, is dripped, piped or trailed onto the body, typically from some device like the piping bag used to decorate cakes.
  • In the 1880s the firm stocked " all the materials used by painters, engravers, etchers, repousse-workers, china-painters, crayon artists, water colorists, tapestry-painters, architects, engineers, and draughtsmen . " They also carried " fancy articles for decorating, in bronze and brass, porcelain and china, Albenine and Barbotine ware, bisque vases and terraline ware, tambourines of sheepskin, calfskin, brass, and satin . " " Five-sixths of the trade is wholesale, extending throughout New England, the Middle and Western States, and Canada, and kept in activity by travelling salesmen ."