Porcelain

Materials

Porcelain

True porcelain, the hard variety, is made from kaolin, quartz, and feldspar, fired at temperatures between 1300 and 1400 degrees.

The so-called “white gold” — of which the first reports in Europe came from daring sailors, merchants, and missionaries — is a millennia-old Chinese invention, the formula for which was discovered in Europe, after long studies and attempts, only at the beginning of the 18th century.

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Hunting “Pig with Dogs” – Doccia

Period: 1750-55

Ice bucket – Doccia

Period: 1770-1780

Inkwell “For writing classic” – Gio Ponti

Period: 1930 c.ca

Large Plate – Doccia

Period: Circa 1745

Liberty-style Vase – Richard Ginori

Period: 1900-1910

Lobed Tray – Doccia

Period: 1750

Mug with saucer – Doccia

Period: Circa 1760

Mug with saucer – Doccia

Period: 1750-1760

Orchestrina – Meissen

Period: XIX Century

Pair of Doccia Hunting Figurines

Period: 1750 c.ca

Pair of plates – Doccia

Period: 1785

Pair of plates – Doccia

Period: Circa 1790

Pair of Pugs – Dresden Manufacture

Period: Late 19th century

Pierced stand – Ginori

Period: Early 19th century

Pierrette – Rosenthal

Period: 1920

Pierrot – Rosenthal

Period: 1919