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  • How to Collect Pottery

    You like older or antique pottery. Want to start a collection. Here is a few pointers so you have a fun collection that is a value also.

  • How to Tell Reproduction Pottery, Roseville, Weller, Hull and More

    You want to start collecting a certain type of pottery but do not want to get ripped off. Try these easy tips.

  • How to Collect Brown Drip Hull Pottery

    The Hull Pottery Company, which operated from 1905 to 1986 in Crooksville, Ohio, manufactured a popular dinnerware line known as the House 'n Garden Brown Drip line. Original production of Brown...

  • How to Collect American Pottery Tiles

    American pottery has been collectible for over a century, and names like Rookwood and Grueby have been most desirable. American pottery tiles have been ignored by many of the pottery collectors,...

  • How to Display an Antique Ceramic Pot Collection

    A colorful antique pot collection can liven up any corner of your house. Whether it's Fiesta or Bückeberg, antique pottery can be displayed in almost any part of your home with success. The...

  • What Is Ironstone?

    Ironstone is a sturdy, durable form of china that is usually undecorated. It was first produced in the 19th century by British potters who exported it to the U.S.

  • How to Collect Scandinavian Pottery

    Scandinavian pottery has been very collectible since Danish Modern style became popular in the 1950s. It is a valuable collectible, and still available. There are many pieces of Scandinavian...

  • How to Identify Quality American Dinnerware

    Identify quality American dinnerware by different characteristics and styles that have become valuable as a result of scarcity or desirability. You probably know that there is not much American...

  • How to Date Rookwood Pottery

    Rookwood Pottery Co. is known for the artistry, style and high standards with which its products were made. It was founded in 1880 by Marie Longworth Nichols and finally closed down production in...

  • How to Tell If Hull Pottery Is Authentic

    People young and old have collected artistic crafts of earlier eras for many years. Hull pottery pieces are prized and displayed in homes around the world. This style of pottery has a distinctive...

  • How to Identify Occupied Japan Markings

    After its defeat in World War II, Japan was occupied by U.S. forces. Ceramics made between 1945 and 1952, when occupation ended, was typically stamped "Occupied Japan" or "Made in Occupied Japan,"...

  • How to Identify Franciscan China

    When Gladding, McBean & Co., a sewer tile manufacturer founded in 1875, decided to add dinnerware to the company's product offerings, principles expected modest success. They underestimated...

  • Majolica History

    Majolica is a type of pottery featuring bright colors and natural motifs such as leaves, fish and birds. Majolica has been produced for thousands of years and is highly prized among collectors.

  • Identifying Marks on Antique China

    China is a term used in the pottery and ceramics world to identify high-quality porcelain originally made only in China. Antique china includes all porcelain ware 100 years of age or older....

  • History of Canonsburg Pottery

    Canonsburg Pottery is dinnerware produced by a now-defunct company in Pennsylvania. Because new pieces are no longer being produced, collectors must go to private owners or companies that...

  • Hull Pottery Information

    Pottery from the A.E. Hull Pottery Company is popular collectible item. The company is the most famous of the so-called "bluebird" pottery companies based in and around Crooksville, Ohio. The...

  • The History of Rookwood

    Rookwood Pottery was one of the first successful, woman-owned businesses to be founded in the United States. Rookwood's detailed, distinctive, pottery is prized by collectors due to the high...

  • How to Collect Red Wing Stoneware

    Red Wing Stoneware began in earnest with pottery manufactured during the period of 1895-1900 as the pottery transitioned from salt glaze to white glaze and the company implemented the modern...

  • Poole Pottery Identification

    Highly collectible Poole Pottery was created in Poole, England from 1921 until the present--and made entirely by hand until 1999. As with many pottery makers, the craftsmen at Poole used various...

  • How to collect Red Wing Art Pottery

    The decorative pieces were inspired by the Arts and Crafts movement of the late 19th century. Brushed Ware was the first Red Wing Art Pottery, produced at the end of the 19th century and early...

  • How to Identify Vintage Texas Pottery

    Vintage Texas production pottery came primarily from Alamo Pottery of San Antonio and Gilmer Potteries of Gilmer. There were several missions and individual potters who worked in Texas, but they...

  • How to Identify Red Wing Pottery

    The collectible Red Wing pottery originally debuted as the Red Wing Stoneware Co. in 1877. During the years Red Wing has been in business, it produced clay products under six different names....

  • How to Collect Red Wing Salt Glaze Pottery

    Pottery and/or antique collectors who want to expand their interest should consider starting a collection of Red Wing Salt Glaze Pottery. Manufactured in the earliest days of Red Wing Potteries,...

  • History of Haeger Pottery

    Haeger potteries opened in 1871, at first manufacturing only bricks. Brick making was an important industry at the turn of the 19th century because most buildings were constructed from wood or...

  • What Does USA on the Bottom of Pottery Mean?

    The history of the domestic pottery industry is interwoven with threats from foreign imports, which eventually led to the demise of American pottery production. American potteries were proud of...

  • How to Identify American Pottery by Clay Color

    Vintage, collectible and antique American pottery can be identified by areas of production and one of the keys to this identification is in the color of clay used. For example, Ohio was an area...

  • How to Start a Red Wing Dinnerware Collection

    Pottery and/or antique collectors who want to expand their interest should consider starting a collection of Red Wing Dinnerware. Red Wing Potteries made nearly 100 patterns of beautiful...

  • History of Moorcroft Pottery

    Moorcroft pottery, now located in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, is one of the most collectible art pottery styles of the Victorian era. William Moorcroft was raised in and began his...

  • Buffalo China History

    The Buffalo Pottery Company was established in Buffalo, New York, in 1901. It was an offshoot of the Larkin Soap Company, which was founded in 1875. John Larkin and his brother-in-law Elbert...

  • How to Identify Old Dishes

    Antiquing is a hobby enjoyed by many collectors. Antique and old dishes and pottery are an interesting area of collecting. There are many old dishes available for those who like a good treasure...

  • How to Appraise Collectible Art Pottery

    This article is about how to appraise collectible art pottery, such as Toby jugs, character jugs, Loving Cups, Bunnykins, animals, and figures and figurines.

  • How to Start Collecting Mid-Century Modern Furniture

    Do you love the retro look of mid-century modern furniture and accessories but don't know much about them? This guide will help you focus on what you want to collect and tell you where to find the...

  • Guide to Regional Antiques in America

    The term antique is generally used to describe something that is more than 100 years old, while collectibles are items that are 30 to 50 years old. For the average collector, these terms have...

  • How to Check Pottery for damage when you see it for sale

    To the collector damaged pottery is not what they desire. But how can you tell if it is damaged? There are several simple steps that can be taken to help in detecting damage. It will be well worth...

  • About McCoy Pottery

    McCoy pottery was an industry leading company in its time. It is still known as a company that produced quality pieces, even though the company ceased production in 1990. The company produced a...

  • How to Buy and collect Roseville Art Pottery

    Roseville Pottery was in business from 1892 to 1954 and produced some of the most popular art pottery in the world. There is a great variety of styles and types that span a wide range of prices....

  • How to Collect McCoy Pottery

    If you are one of the thousands of people that love American pottery, you should collect McCoy pottery. Manufactured from 1910 to 1990, McCoy became well known for its decorative pottery made from...

  • How to Collect Fulper Pottery

    There are many antique pottery collectors who like to accumulate Fulper Pottery because of its unique range of design. Fulper pieces range from simple, utilitarian pieces to art pottery. Fulper...

  • How to Collect Moorcroft English Pottery

    William Moorcroft produced pottery in the late 1890s and early 1900s, first as a designer for James McIntyre and Company of Britain, and then later on his own. His son took over the business and...

  • How to Collect Weller Pottery

    The Weller Pottery Company was founded in 1972 in Ohio, and quickly grew to one of the largest in the state. By the 1920s, it became S.S. Weller, Inc. Weller pottery pieces are well-known around...

  • How to Recognize Authentic Hull Pottery

    Hull pottery is a popular collectors item, often imitated. Recognizing genuine pieces of hull pottery is as simple as knowing what marks and finish details to look for. The ability to spot a fake...

  • How to Collect Van Briggle Pottery

    Born in 1867, Artus Van Briggle was a gifted artist who started his career in art pottery at Rookwood. After spending three years in Paris studying art, he moved to Colorado Springs in 1899 to...

  • How to Collect Rookwood Pottery

    Started by a woman in Cincinnati, Rookwood Pottery grew to be one of the most reputable art pottery companies of the late 1800s. They perfected a style which involved painting a picture on pottery...

  • How to Clean Pottery Collectibles

    Don't hesitate to buy that aged, but beautiful piece of pottery, or to display that cherished, old collectible that you've had stored away for years. Even pottery with several years' accumulation...

  • How to Recognize the Real McCoy

    McCoy is a type of colorful American pottery that was made in Ohio from 1910 until the late 1990s. Its popularity has spawned a number of knockoffs. Here's how to tell if you're buying the real McCoy.

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