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Cream-coloured, refined earthenware with a lead glaze over a pale body
Creamware is a cream-coloured refined earthenware with a lead glaze over a pale body, known in France as faïence fine, in the Netherlands as Engels porselein
Creamware
Manufacturer of sound cards and synthesizers
Creamware Audio GmbH (typically styled as creamw@re) was a manufacturer of DSP-based sound cards and synthesizers in Siegburg, Germany. These cards are
Creamware_(company)
English entrepreneur and abolitionist; founder, Wedgwood pottery (1730–1795)
of society. Every new invention that Wedgwood produced – green glaze, creamware, black basalt, and jasperware – was quickly copied. Having once achieved
Josiah_Wedgwood
Tin-glazed pottery
the first half of the eighteenth century with the introduction of cheap creamware. Dutch potters in northern (and Protestant) Germany established German
Faience
English pottery and porcelain manufacturer
18th century, however, it was table china in the refined earthenware creamware that represented most of the sales and profits. In the later 19th century
Wedgwood
of digital audio systems, that in 2007 took over some of the assets of Creamware, and continues to support, manufacture and develop the Scope DSP hardware
Sonic_Core
British painter (1903–1985)
of British ceramics and painter. He is noted for his championship of creamware and his ground-breaking studies of this ceramic type in particular. Donald
Donald_Chisholm_Towner
Hardware synthesizer module
The Noah has been designed by German company Creamware. It was produced from 2003 to 2006, until Creamware went bankrupt. The Noah was built around Analog
Soundart_Chameleon
English painter
Alphabet mug by Eric Ravilious, transfer printing on Wedgwood creamware, 1937
Eric_Ravilious
Cup and extra-secure saucer
porcelain (or bone china) with some in high quality earthenware such as creamware. The saucers normally match the cups, but are sometimes in silver, or
Trembleuse
Family of potters, operating from late 18th to late 20th century
1940s, and later became a part of Royal Doulton in 1972. Transfer-printed creamware plate, c 1814–30, John and William Ridgway Porcelain dish, hand-painted
Ridgway_Potteries
problems and was mainly engaged in improving the lead glazes for creamware. Creamware at that time had already achieved an acceptable white body but no
Thomas_Whieldon
English pottery manufacturer
1756 in Hunslet, just south of Leeds, England. It is best known for its creamware, which is often called Leedsware; it was the "most important rival" in
Leeds_Pottery
Nonvitreous pottery
fine wares such as Wedgwood's creamware, that competed with porcelain with considerable success, as his huge creamware Frog Service for Catherine the
Earthenware
Connection standard for electronic musical instruments
the host CPU, as with Symbolic Sound Corporation's Kyma System, and the Creamware/Sonic Core Pulsar/SCOPE systems, which power an entire recording studio's
MIDI
American sound designer
representations of the Pro One and Prophet 5 for the Creamware series of audio cards. Bowen departed Creamware and, after a short consulting assignment with
John S. Bowen (sound designer)
John_S._Bowen_(sound_designer)
Ceramic material
century was based on soft-paste porcelain, and refined earthenwares such as creamware, which could compete with porcelain, and had devastated the faience industries
Porcelain
City in Staffordshire, England
Cornwall together with other materials and facilitated the production of creamware and bone china. Other production centres in Britain, Europe and worldwide
Stoke-on-Trent
Historic ceramic-producing region in England
powder to the local reddish clay he could create a more palatable white or Creamware. The flint was sourced from either the South Coast of England or France
Staffordshire_Potteries
Capabilities of soils
Mayan creamware ceramic vessel
Soil_functions
Pottery covered in glaze containing tin oxide
near white, firing bodies in Europe from the late 18th century, such as creamware by Josiah Wedgwood, and increasingly cheap European porcelain and Chinese
Tin-glazed_pottery
British studio potter
2002. Keeler makes salt glaze pottery influenced by early Staffordshire Creamware. Keeler was born in London and attended Harrow School of Art, London from
Walter_Keeler
British potter (c. 1735–1813)
parish of Stoke upon Trent. Greatbatch is best known as a producer of creamware, and finished wares were either finished with transparent glaze or were
William_Greatbatch
Type of porcelain
the top end of the market, and English and local glazed earthenware (creamware and the Italian version called terraglia) in the middle and lower parts
Capodimonte_porcelain
pottery at Indeo House. Indeo Pottery were well known for their Saltglaze, Creamware and Pearlware Tea Canisters inscribed with owners names, but within 2
Bovey_Tracey_Potteries
Items used for setting a table and serving food
of European porcelain and cheaper fine earthenwares like faience and creamware, as well as the resumption of large imports of Chinese export porcelain
Tableware
Decorative objects made from clay and other raw materials by the process of pottery
painting includes painted decoration on lead-glazed earthenware such as creamware or tin-glazed pottery such as maiolica or faience. Typically the body
Ceramic_art
Faience pottery from Rouen, France
reduced, mainly because of competition from cheaper and better English creamware. For a brief period from 1673 to 1696 another factory in the city also
Rouen_faience
Spanish porcelain factory
when it switched to hard-paste porcelain; some pieces made were in fact creamware, an English style of fine earthenware. The factory concentrated on figurines
Real_Fábrica_del_Buen_Retiro
Former ceramics factory in England
continued to produce the cheaper "useful" wares, such as transfer-printed creamware. In 1767 Wedgwood paid about three thousand pounds for his new site, which
Etruria_Works
Low lipped vessel in which sauce is served
of the early factories manufactured full dinner services, but the new creamware, developed by Wedgwood, lent itself to the manufacture of large plates
Sauce_boat
Pottery manufacturer based in Liverpool, England
based in Toxteth, Liverpool, England. between 1793/94 and 1841. They made creamware and pearlware pottery as well as bone china porcelain. About 1793-4 Richard
Herculaneum_Pottery
Programmes of a British television series
Pair of Yorkshire jugs, sponge decorated, £2,000, pair of Staffordshire creamware jugs, with 'Wealden type' glaze, £4,000 – Art Deco sofa, 1930s, £800 –
List of Antiques Roadshow episodes
List_of_Antiques_Roadshow_episodes
Synthesizer
in 2000 and the Pro 53 in 2003. Bowen also provided consultation for Creamware for their 2003 software emulations, the Prophet and Prophet Plus. Arturia
Prophet-5
Area of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
riverside flats. It was at one point the main production site for Leeds Creamware, a type of pottery (still produced) so called because of its cream glazing
Hunslet
Local museum in North Yorkshire, England
Russian Royalty. The Holland-Child Collection of predominantly Leeds made Creamware ceramics. Artefacts from Roman, Etruscan, Ancient Greek, Babylonian and
Royal_Pump_Room,_Harrogate
Topics referred to by the same term
creating gene libraries Scope (synthesizer), a DSP-based synthesizer by Creamware Endoscope, an optical instrument (borescope) used to perform medical visual
Scope
Method of decorating ceramics
high-quality earthenwares that English potters had been developing, such as creamware and pearlware. By the end of the 18th century, a variant technique giving
Transfer_printing
United States historic place
Courier-Post. "Richard Veit | Fragments of Forgotten Empires: A French Creamware Bowl from Joseph Bonaparte's Estate at Point Breeze in Bordentown, New
Point_Breeze_(estate)
English brand of pottery and homewares
factory until 2008. His early products comprised earthenwares such as creamware (a fine cream-coloured earthenware) and pearlware (a fine earthenware
Spode
Observatory
Between 1997 and 2004, the telescope was owned by the digital audio company Creamware and used for inspirational purposes and as a location for their musical
Stockert_Radio_Telescope
Dinner service by Wedgwood
service, it was made from Wedgwood's "Queen's ware", the firm's type of creamware or fine earthenware. Normally, large services for royalty and the top
Frog_Service
but carried forward under a unified direction since 1819. Emulating the creamware perfected by Josiah Wedgwood in the 1770s, and under the artistic and
Creil-Montereau_faience
Synthesizer composed of separate modules
AudioMulch Arturia Modular V Bidule Bitwig Studio (The Grid) Cardinal ChucK CreamwareAudio Modular III Csound Doepfer MaxMSP Moog Model 15 Kyma Pure Data Reaktor
Modular_synthesizer
Portuguese and Spanish painted tiles
Lisbon factories started to use another type of transfer-printing: using creamware blanks. While these industrialized methods produced simple, stylized designs
Azulejo
Folk hunting song from Cumberland, England
armoured formation reconnaissance regiment of the British Army. Wedgwood's creamware pitcher modelled with hunting scenes in low relief and with a handle modelled
D'ye_ken_John_Peel_(song)
Historic British fort in present-day Pittsburgh, PA, USA during the Seven Years' War
stoneware sherd and one lead musket ball. Three features also had either creamware ceramic sherds dating no earlier than 1762 to 1770 or a pearlware sherd
Fort_Pitt_(Pennsylvania)
Digital audio workstation
8 & AudioMedia III PCI, Yamaha CBXD3 & CBXD5, Akai DR8 & DR16, & the Creamware Master port. Recording multiple tracks at once was possible. One of the
Cubase
Pottery decorating technique
either inglaze or overglaze decoration. With the English invention of creamware and other white-bodied earthenwares in the 18th century, underglaze decoration
Underglaze
Japanese potter (born 1943)
consisted of ash-glazed stoneware, after which he explored sancai and creamware. Most recently Yasuda has been working with celadon-glazed porcelain.
Takeshi_Yasuda
Defunct pottery manufacturer
Teakwood 1915 Athens 1915 Blue Drapery 1915 Brighton 1915 Copra 1915 Creamware 1915 Fairfield 1915 Orris 1915 Baldin 1915–1920 Flemish mid teens−1928
Weller_Pottery
Municipality and town in Oaxaca, Mexico
found throughout the terraces. These ceramics included “creamware” bowls and jars. The creamware has a distinct yellow to yellow-orange color. Balkansky
Monte_Negro,_Oaxaca
the bulk of the wares were based on white bodies, the earliest being creamware and pearlware, while later, heavier and thicker bodies resembled ironstone
Mocha_decorated_pottery
Vessel for preparing and serving tea
and continued manufacturing earthenware and stoneware pots; the famed creamware services made in Staffordshire reached popularity in the second half of
Teapot
Art of painting on ceramics
painting includes painted decoration on lead-glazed earthenware such as creamware or tin-glazed pottery such as maiolica or faience. Typically, the body
China_painting
Swedish porcelain manufacturer
probably designed by Alf Wallander (1862-1914), Rorstrand, c. 1911, creamware A plate from Rorstrand's Mon Ami line, designed by Marianne Westman A
Rörstrand
Welsh pottery active 1764 to 1870
"its main product was coarse redware for farm and domestic use, though creamware and lead-glazed earthenware were also made". But Dillwyn, who also wrote
Cambrian_Pottery
Road in Alexandria, Virginia, United States
demolition of a six block area along King Street. In 1965 Bulldozers revealed creamware, glasswork, porcelain, and pottery. Bulldozers preparing for parking garage
King Street (Alexandria, Virginia)
King_Street_(Alexandria,_Virginia)
Fused coating on ceramic objects
either inglaze or overglaze decoration. With the English invention of creamware and other white-bodied earthenwares in the 18th century, underglaze decoration
Ceramic_glaze
Russian style of blue and white ceramics
developed a faience, or white earthenware, of a quality that rivaled the creamware being produced in England at the time. They followed the development of
Gzhel
Pre-Columbian pottery
Creamware vessel featuring the Smoking Xul glyph, Maya, Alta Verapaz region, Guatemala, Late Classic Period, Royal Ontario Museum.
Maya_ceramics
Historic house in Maine, United States
from the 1750s to 1780s. Pieces of 1750s salt-glazed stoneware, 1760s creamware and 1780s pearlware were discovered. Also found was a white piece of porcelain
Tate_House_(Portland,_Maine)
British potter
emulated by others. His early work with adding lead to glaze influenced creamware and the later work by Josiah Wedgwood. He died in Shelton 1743, aged 55
John_Astbury
Matching pottery pieces
1750, copying Chinese figures. salt-glazed stoneware, c. 8.5 inches tall Creamware, c. 1780 Greyhound pen-holders, c. 1825-1840 On a mantelpiece Less common
Staffordshire_dog_figurine
are also classified as terraglia, the Italian version of Staffordshire creamware, a fine earthenware. The production was generally similar to that of the
Le_Nove_porcelain
Sound card
or ME. The Korg OASYS workstation synthesizer released in early 2005. Creamware Korg OASYS Korg Prophecy Korg Trinity Korg Triton Korg Z1 Trask, Simon
Korg_OASYS_PCI
British ceramics manufacturing company
so-called "Lambeth faience" (from 1872) was "a somewhat heavily potted creamware much used in decorative plaques and vases", often with underglaze painting
Royal_Doulton
United States historic place
middle 19th-century, while there was an absence of artifacts (such as creamware and hand-wrought nails) typically found at 18th-century frontier sites
Swaggerty_Blockhouse
American glass manufacturer
the Sandwich Glass Museum at the Internet Archive "Description: English creamware cylindrical mug". Five College Museums/Historic Deerfield. Retrieved 4
Deming_Jarves
Founder of the Spode pottery works (1733-1797)
rights under a Turner family patent in 1805. The production there was of creamware with blue painted decoration as well as white stoneware in the manner
Josiah_Spode
English potter (1947–2018)
Knapton. The work produced reflected a shared admiration of 18th century creamware and some ambitious designs were produced influencing the look and feel
Roger_Michell_(studio_potter)
Topics referred to by the same term
new wave/indie rock band Pulsar (synthesizer), a music synthesizer by Creamware Pulsar (social listening platform), an audience intelligence platform
Pulsar_(disambiguation)
Historic site in Queensland, Australia
bottle glass and metal artefacts were recorded. Small scatters of white creamware ceramics dominated the artefact assemblage across the survey area. Notable
Taroom_Aboriginal_Settlement
American political cartoonist and engraver
JSTOR 1180534. S2CID 154277762. Christina H. Nelson. Transfer-Printed Creamware and Pearlware for the American Market. Winterthur Portfolio, Vol. 15,
James_Akin
Valley and stream in Palestine and Israel
cemetery yielding up, aside from ossuaries, pithoi, churns and varieties of creamware, 8 ring-shaped objects, mostly cast from electrum, with a 70% gold and
Wadi_Qana
English porcelain manufacturer
Hill, just outside the town, had begun before then, as evidenced by a creamware jug dated 1750 that is in the possession of the Victoria and Albert Museum
Royal_Crown_Derby
United States historic place in Albany, New York
The site was in continual use and artifacts recovered include 1830s creamware or pearlware and 1860s copper bottom coffee pot remnants. The artifacts
Fort_Orange_(New_Netherland)
German potter (1722–1788)
the American South from Pennsylvania. Aust was a pioneer in the use of creamware, white, salt-glazed stoneware and tin-glazed earthenware. His apprentices
Gottfried_Aust
Ceramic glazing process
century the reduction in the price of porcelain, and the new English creamwares and related types, stronger, lighter and often cheaper than traditional
Tin-glazing
Pottery made in Nevers, France, since 1580
led to the French market being flooded by cheaper and better English creamwares, leading to crisis for all French manufacturers of faience, and by 1797
Nevers_faience
German synthesizer company
drive bay package. Wavetable Oscillator for Creamware Modular: A wavetable oscillator module for the Creamware Modular synthesizer system. Q: A DSP-driven
Waldorf_Music
Pottery produced by artists emphasizing artistic rather than practical value
manufacturing sector had managed to survive the onslaught of English creamwares and bone china, and increasingly cheap hard-paste porcelain from local
Art_pottery
Season of television series
the pottery of Enoch Wood & Sons. Experimental archaeology: a replica creamware vase. 32 2 "Episode Two (Roman Building, Papcastle, Cumbria)" Papcastle
Time_Team_series_6
18th century English pottery figures
Commons has media related to Pew groups. "Christie's": A Staffordshire Creamware 'Pew Group', Circa 1745, Lot 500, Sale 1618, "Property From the Collection
Pew_group
Type of earthenware
limited to redware and stoneware, with occasional attempts to produce creamware and porcelain. Beginning in the late 18th century, potters in Scotland
Yellowware
Tin-glazed pottery
oxide, with decoration over it in white tin-glaze. The development of creamware, a very white and tough earthenware, by Wedgwood and other North Staffordshire
English_delftware
Ceramics museum in Ontario, Canada
from the 14th to 18th centuries. European earthenware includes pieces of creamwares, faïences from France, English delftware, Italian maiolicas, English slipwares
Gardiner_Museum
Type of English pottery figurine
Barrie & Jenkins, 1971 Briggs, 63-64; "Vicar and Moses". A STAFFORDSHIRE CREAMWARE 'PEW GROUP', CIRCA 1745, Lot 500, Sale 1618, "Property From the Collection
Staffordshire_figure
English painter
porcelain factory in the 1780s, later moving to Worcester. He painted creamware at Swansea between 1795 and 1809 for Cambrian Pottery, coming under the
Thomas_Pardoe_(painter)
English painter
The service was in "Queen's ware", Wedgwood's finest formulation of creamware or fine earthenware. Normally, large services for royalty were in porcelain
Anthony_Devis
Ceramics museum in Italy
noted ceramics scholars. Vincennes porcelain, planter, 1750-56 Wedgwood creamware dish, c. 1770 Cup by Dagoty, Paris, c. 1810 Doccia porcelain, service
Porcelain_Museum_(Florence)
4th century) and two other bronze brooches (or fibulae). A 3rd century creamware flagon probably used to hold wine. A fragment of a Roman army stewpot
Roman_Middlewich
Electronic musical instrument
WK-3000/3200/3300/3700/3800/etc. – providing digital drawbar organ function. Creamware B4000 (Tonewheel synthesizer) Crumar Mojo, Mojo 61, Mojo Classic Diversi
Clonewheel_organ
19th-century Yorkshire manufacturer of porcelain
Amongst its more standard products were blue and green transfer-printed creamware and pearlware services and other items featuring a variety of scenes:
Rockingham_Pottery
Porcelain made by the Cozzi factory in Italy
was not surprising that both factories began to make maiolica and then creamware, refined earthenware of the sort pioneered by the Staffordshire factories
Cozzi_porcelain
Municipality in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
villagers travelling throughout southern Germany hawking wares. They sold creamware, sanguine, whetstones, woodenware and wheel resin (this last item led
Dittweiler
Colloquial name of a pottery factory
Wedgwood, the famous early industrialist. Unable to meet the demand for his creamwares, he sub-contracted other potters to make shapes to his specification,
Potbank
CREAMWARE
CREAMWARE
CREAMWARE
CREAMWARE
Girl/Female
German
Will-helmet
Female
Chinese
a halo, vapour; red sky.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sanskrit, Telugu
Bhishma
Girl/Female
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Strength; Power; Body
Girl/Female
Indian, Tamil
Cloud
Girl/Female
Indian
The Moon
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
Smiling
Boy/Male
German
Ruling raven.
Girl/Female
Indian
Musical Tune
CREAMWARE
CREAMWARE
CREAMWARE
CREAMWARE
CREAMWARE