Sagittarius Creations by Jennifer and Elisa

Introduction
Front Pages: Demo 1 | Demo 2 | Demo 3 | Demo 4 | Demo 5 | Demo 6
Secondary Pages: Demo 1 | Demo 2 | Demo 3 | Demo 4 | Demo 5 | Demo 6

Rough Drafts: Page 1 | Page 2a | Page 2b | Page 2.2 | Page 3a | Page 3b
| Page 3c

Maryland Diagnostic Artifacts
 
astbury top
 
Glossary
References
Acknowledgements
Links
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Astbury - Type


Defining Attributes: Thinly potted earthenware with a dense, dull-red body and a ginger colored lead glaze. Decorated by engine turning or with white clay sprig-molding.


Chronology: Fine red earthenwares appear by the early-to-mid 1720s, and decline in production after 1750. This ware is a good time-marker for the second quarter of the 18th century (Noël Hume 1970).

 

Description:

Fabric
A finely-grained, homogenous earthenware body, with a high-fired red paste.

Glaze
Lead glaze producing a ginger to light-chocolate brown surface color.

Decoration
Vessels can be plain, decorated with white slip bands around the rim, or sprig-molded in white pipe clay with animals, flowers, and royal arms (Noël Hume 1970:70; Poole 1995:54). Some pots were slip cast in molds, producing raised decorative panels with human and animal figures or floral motifs, or were painted with gold enamel on the body (Barker and Halfpenny 1990:23-30).

Form
Forms include teapots and cups, bowls, and coffee pots.

 

Notes:

Fine red earthenwares are commonly named Astbury Ware after the potter John Astbury (1686 – 1743), but many other potters in Staffordshire also made this ceramic, so "Astbury-type" is a more appropriate name. However, others have suggested that even "Astbury-type" is misleading, since there is no firm evidence that John Astbury made this ware, and thus names like "fine red earthenware" are preferred (Barker and Halfpenny 1990).

 

Reference:
Barker and Halfpenny 1990; Noël Hume 1970; Poole 1995

 

Copyright © 2003 by
Maryland Archaeological Conservation Lab Updated: 02/28/08
 
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