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| Artificial Porcelain |
| Written by The Expert | |
| Sunday, 20 November 2005 | |
Artificial Porcelain![]() Artificial Porcelain That Milchglas itself did not become the European sought-after substitute for Chinese porcelain was probably due to the inherent differences between clay and glass per se. The nature of glass made it impossible to shape it by any of the means used by the potter, so, instead, a mixture of clay and ground glass was tried. Porcelain made in this way resembles that of the Chinese only superficially and is always termed "soft" or "soft-paste" porcelain, since it required a softer (i.e., lower temperature) firing and the product was softer (could be scratched with a knife). The date and place of the first attempt to make soft porcelain are debatable, but some Middle Eastern pottery of the 12th century was made from glass and glaze materials mixed with clay and is occasionally translucent. Much the same formula was employed with a measure of success in Florence about 1575 at workshops under the patronage of Duke Francesco de'Medici. No further attempts of any kind appear to have been made until the mid 17th century, when Claude and Francois Reverend, Paris importers of Dutch pottery, were granted a monopoly of porcelain manufacture in France. It is not known whether they succeeded in making it, but it is known that by the end of the 17th century "soft porcelain" was being made in quantity by a factory at Saint-Cloud, near Paris. Another product called "fritted porcelain" , but also referred to as artificial and soft porcelain, in the ongoing attempt by Europeans to emulate raw materials of Chinese porcelain (prior to knowing and having the Chinese kaolin-to-feldspar proportions) was made by pulverizing Chinese porcelain pieces and introducing the powder directly as a frit into "porcelain" clay and glaze recipes (using blends of known earthenware and stoneware clays). Similarly, a ware called "cupel", made of (usually) bone-ash porcelain crushed and melted and poured into molds without any further to-do over mixing with crude clay before firing, as would be done with such a composition to be used as a frit (as in the case of the so-called 'fritted', or 'artificial' porcelains). Alla Porcellana ![]() Alla Porcellane Dish This family of porcelain wares was in the workshops of Faenza by the end of the 15th century and continued there for several decades, with variations appearing at Caffaggiolo and Montelupo in Tuscany throughout the 16th century. |
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