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Creamware
Defining
Attributes
Creamware is a clear lead-glazed, thinly potted, refined
earthenware with a cream colored body. Variations in decorative
techniques, such as molding, underglaze and overglaze painting,
and transfer-printing, are used to describe and date these wares.
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Chronology
In 1740 Enoch Booth introduced
a cream-bodied refined earthenware that was soon being used by many
potters including Thomas Whieldon and Josiah Wedgewood (Noël Hume
2001:204, 209). In the 1740s and 1750s metal oxides were applied
to this ware in various shades of green, purple, brown yellow, and
blue creating "clouded" and "Tortoiseshell"
wares. This pottery is also referred to as Whieldon ware, though
it was made by many factories between the 1750s – 1770s (Noël Hume
1970:124; Barker and Halfpenny 1990:36).
In partnership, Thomas Whieldon and Josiah Wedgewood
developed a rich green-glazed cream-colored ware in 1759. This ware
was not as successful as Wedgewood would have liked and in 1762
he introduced a clear lead-glazed cream-colored ware that became
known as creamware. Using adaptations of the molded rim patterns
found on white salt glazed stoneware, Wedgewood marketed "Queen's
ware" and "Royal ware" creamware. One of the most
common motifs, "feather-edged," was produced by 1765 (Noël
Hume 1970:125). Creamware quickly became a popular tableware and
was found in most households throughout England and the British
colonies.
Slip cast or molded fruit and vegetable shaped
tablewares were painted in realistic colors or with the tortoiseshell
and clouded ware oxides. This "cauliflower" ware was popular
between 1760 - 1780. During the same time period, overglaze transfer
printing in black and red was applied alone or with overglaze enameling
to creamware vessels. Underglaze painting and transfer printing,
particularly in blue, began to be used in the 1770s and became the
most prevalent decoration on refined earthenware, especially the
whiter pearlware body, after 1780 (Barker and Halfpenny 1990:71).
Vessels with annular or banded decoration, also called "dipped"
wares, were manufactured in the last quarter of the 18th
century.
Description
Fabric
Creamware has a hard, somewhat porous body, and thin walls. Crushed,
finely ground silicon, feldspar, and occasionally kaolin, were added
to the clay (Kybalová 1989:13). This paste is basically the same
as that used for white salt-glazed stoneware, but is fired at an
earthenware temperature, producing a cream-colored body (Noël Hume
1970:123).
Glaze
Bisque creamware was dusted with lead powder to produce a light
transparent lead glaze when fired. The glaze often pooled in crevices,
such as footrings or molded design elements, in yellow or greenish
yellow shades. Earlier creamware tends to be a deeper yellow than
later vessels, but this is not an infallible rule and thus not a
reliable marker.
Decoration
The vast majority of early creamware is plain, though often molded
or slip-cast. Decorations in color by overglaze painting and overglaze
bat transfer printing, often in imitation of Chinese porcelain,
were the main decorative techniques used in the mid-18th
century. Transfer printed designs were also painted with overglaze
enamels. Underglaze painting with cobalt blue became more extensively
used after 1780 (Noël Hume 1970; Miller et al. 1994:220-223).
Annular, "dipped", wares are characterized
by bands of color and engine turned designs on hollowware forms,
mugs, bowls, and pitchers. Applied slip polychrome designs, known
as "common cable" and "cat's eye", plus the
dendritic mocha or seaweed motif, were popular annular motifs (Miller
1980; Sussman 1997).
Form
Creamware came in all tableware forms, especially tea wares, and
including punch pots, bowls, punch bowls, jugs, and tureens. Decorative
pieces such as figurines, lattice work baskets, and fancy centerpieces,
plus toiletry ware, especially chamber pots, were also made.
Notes
Noël Hume
(1970:123) refers to the gradual perfecting of cream-colored refined
earthenware as the most important development in 18th
century ceramic technology. Wedgewood’s innovations in creating
and marketing creamware, in combination with the new printing technology
and improvements in transportation services pushed Staffordshire
to a leading position in the world market. Prior to 1770, many types
of ceramics were imported into the American colonies but by the
1780s creamware and pearlware had displaced most of them (Miller
et al. 1994:223).
References
Barker and Halfpenny 1990; Hunter
2001; Kybalová
1989; Miller 1980;
Miller et al.
1994; Noël
Hume 1970, 2001;
Poole 1995; Sussman
1997
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