Showing 1139 items
matching shino-glazed
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Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Tile
Glazed mosaic tile - dark green background with light green patternceramics, earthenware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Border Tile
see NA359Thin earthenware tile glazed orange with black pattern. Used for border3770 (on back)ceramics, earthenware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Border Tile
See NA359Glazed border tile - curved with darkened edges. Dark red in colourceramics, earthenware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Tile
See NA359White glazed rectangle tile engraved in orange writing 'This Water is Scalding''492A' '29' '5'ceramics, earthenware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Tile, 1905
Possibly designed by donor's mother, Mrs Emma OtterbachGreen glazed mosaic tile depicting morning angel with child on backceramics, earthenware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Tile
See NA359Glazed mosaic tile - dark green background with light green patternceramics, earthenware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Tile
Square glazed tile - multi coloured pattern of mushroom and grey-greenceramics, earthenware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Border Tile
Dark red glazed border tile slightly rounded with darker edge.ceramics, earthenware -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Ceramic - Madonna and Child
Viola Annie McVicars (1911–1990) was born in Korumburra on 29 April 1911. At the age of 21, she married William John Ayling (1909–1995). After their marriage in 1932, they moved to Kew, initially to 81 Tennyson Street, and later to 180 Pakington Street. A professional tailoress, Viola Ayling was also a talented amateur potter, creating her ceramics at her home in Pakington Street, where she had an internal studio and a handmade, wood-fired brick kiln in her backyard. Following her death in 1990, her studio pottery passed to her daughter, and following the daughter’s death, to her granddaughter. This piece of glazed earthenware is part of a collection of 15 functional and decorative ceramic items donated by Viola’s granddaughter to the collection in 2024.A handmade, abstract figurative sculpture, expertly potted and glazed. The style is representative of Australian ceramic design of the period, particularly that employed by Klytie Pate.Hand modelled ceramic sculpture of a Madonna and Child figural group. The abstract figures are fully covered in an olive green overglaze, apart from the base which is overglazed in cream. The base has an incised spiral beneath the glaze, which was used to decorate the hidden surfaces of a number of pieces, The base is signed with the artist's name around the edge.Signature to base: "V. Ayling"ceramics, pakington street -- kew (vic.), sculptures, abstract art, madonnas and child, viola annie mcvicars, viola annie ayling -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Domestic object - Doll's tea Set, n.d
Porcelain plate with stamped relief pattern around edges. Transfer image of a violet in centre of plate. Glazed with green glaze around edge, white elsewhere. Porcelain teacup with stamped relief pattern and transfer of violets and green leaves. Gold paint highlights design elements and rim of teacup. Green glaze in decoration, clear/white glaze elsewhere. Items measures: Plate: Dia: 9.7 Depth: 1.2, Saucer: Dia 8.6, Cup: Dia Top: 5.5 Dia Base: 2.2 -
Orbost & District Historical Society
ink bottle, 1890's
An ink bottle was made of glass or ceramic and typically sat on a desk. The writer would dip the pen (or quill) into the bottle to put more ink on the pen. Because they sat on a desk, ink bottles were often decorative.We have mostly dispensed with ink bottles and quills. This item is an example of early stationery equipment commonly used in schools, households and commercial enterprises.A cylindrical brown glazed ceramic ink bottle with the neck narrowing to a pouring lip.Below the pouring lip - ANGUS & CO INK COMMERCIALcontainer ink-bottle ceramic angus-&-co writing-materials -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Container - Jar Base
Human beings appear to have been making their own ceramics for at least 26,000 years, subjecting clay and silica to intense heat to fuse and form ceramic materials. The earliest found so far were in southern central Europe and were sculpted figures, not dishes. The earliest known pottery was made by mixing animal products with clay and baked in kilns at up to 800°C. While actual pottery fragments have been found up to 19,000 years old, it was not until about ten thousand years later that regular pottery became common. An early people that spread across much of Europe is named after its use of pottery, the Corded Ware culture. These early Indo-European peoples decorated their pottery by wrapping it with rope, while still wet. When the ceramics were fired, the rope burned off but left a decorative pattern of complex grooves on the surface. The invention of the wheel eventually led to the production of smoother, more even pottery using the wheel-forming technique, like the pottery wheel. Early ceramics were porous, absorbing water easily. It became useful for more items with the discovery of glazing techniques, coating pottery with silicon, bone ash, or other materials that could melt and reform into a glassy surface, making a vessel less pervious to water. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CeramicThe discovery and development of ceramics in numerous shapes, form and materials, revolutionised the world.White ceramic container, glazed with single groove around circumference near lipNoneflagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, ceramics -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Decorative object - Nativity, Mid - Late 20th C
Group of Polychrome matte glazed stoneware nativity figures - Group of 8 (Incomplete)nativity, mary, joseph, shepherds, kings, animals, jesus, angel, sheep, christmas -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Decorative object - Photograph, Chris Pittard, Eltham District Historical Society Plate, c.2018
Decorative plate commissioned by Eltham District Historical Society for use as gifts for guest speakers, etc. The decoration is a representation of the EDHS logo which features the Eltham Railway Trestle Bridge and Shillinglaw CottageSquare clay plate, glazed and fired, 14.5 x 14.5 x 2cmOn face decorated with the EDHS logo in colour. On revesre "Eltham District Historical Society" and "C. Pittard"chris pittard, decorative plate, shillinglaw cottage, eltham railway trestle bridge, artwork -
Greensborough Historical Society
Domestic object - Shaving mug and brush, Hoffman shaving mug and brush set, 1950c
Men's shaving mug and brush. Hoffman brand.Ceramic shaving mug, yellow glaze; with pig's bristle wooden shaving brushshaving mugs, shaving brushes, hoffman -
Greensborough Historical Society
Plate, Serge Daeffler, Old Eltham Bridge at Lower Plenty, 1980s
Ceramic plate, decorated by Serge Daeffler. Hand painted text with transfer illustration of the Old Eltham Bridge at Lower Plenty which was opened on 8/3/1867.Ceramic plate, off-white with green edges, colour transfer photograph, glazed"Welcome to Banyule", "Old Etham (sic) Bridge at Lower Plenty", by Serge Daeffler. Card of Banyule's Heidelberg School Heritage Artist, Robert S, Phillips attached to rear, with price label from Savers.plates, lower plenty -
Orbost & District Historical Society
ink bottle, first half 20th century
An ink bottle was made of glass or ceramic and typically sat on a desk. The writer would dip the pen (or quill) into the bottle to put more ink on the pen. Because they sat on a desk, ink bottles were often decorative.We have mostly dispensed with ink bottles and quills. This item is an example of early stationery equipment commonly used in schools, households and commercial enterprises.A cylindrical brown glazed ceramic ink bottle with the neck narrowing to a pouring lip.Towards the bottom : WYATT MOTTS LANCELEY -
Bright & District Historical Society operating the Bright Museum
Dish
Brought to the Ovens Goldfields by Chinese men working in the area in the 19th century. Most likely made in China.Aldo Gios recorded the location of where most of the pieces in this collection were found. Some maps drawn by Aldo Gios also give more detail. This detail is rare, as most pieces of broken crockery were discarded and complete items were usually collected with no thought to recording the location they came from. Part of one of the largest collections of Chinese ware found in the Upper Ovens area and the only one recording the location where found.Porcelain food dish, glazed, Chinese. Blue pattern on inside and outer surfaces.chinese, goldfields, gios, tableware, glaze, porcelain, dish, handpainted -
Bright & District Historical Society operating the Bright Museum
Pipe
Brought to the Ovens Goldfields by Chinese men working in the area in the 19th century. Most likely made in China.Aldo Gios recorded the location of where most of the pieces in this collection were found. Some maps drawn by Aldo Gios also give more detail. This detail is rare, as most pieces of broken crockery were discarded and complete items were usually collected with no thought to recording the location they came from. Part of one of the largest collections of Chinese ware found in the Upper Ovens area and the only one recording the location where found.Earthenware bowl in a terracotta colour, glazed. Part of an opium pipe used by the Chinese.Chinese characters etched onto outer surface.chinese, pipe, goldfields, gios, glaze, buckland, earthenware, terracotta, opium -
Bright & District Historical Society operating the Bright Museum
Pipe, Opium
Brought to the Ovens Goldfields by Chinese men working in the area in the 19th century. Most likely made in China.Aldo Gios recorded the location of where most of the pieces in this collection were found. Some maps drawn by Aldo Gios also give more detail. This detail is rare, as most pieces of broken crockery were discarded and complete items were usually collected with no thought to recording the location they came from. Part of one of the largest collections of Chinese ware found in the Upper Ovens area and the only one recording the location where found.Earthenware bowl in a terracotta colour. Part of an opium pipe used by the Chinese, glazed.Chinese characters etched on side of bowl.chinese, pipe, goldfields, gios, glaze, earthenware, harrietville, terracotta, opium -
National Wool Museum
Photograph, Collins Bros Cricket Club Premiers Season 1921-22
Part of Collins Brother Collection.Framed and glazed photograph - Collins Bros Cricket Club Premiers 1921/22.textile mills sporting teams, collins bros mill pty ltd, sport, textile mills - sporting teams -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Tile
See 359Pale blue glazed border tile with white edged gumnut and leaf pattern'1503'ceramics, earthenware -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Ceramic - Brick -Ventilation
Brick was made for ventilation of buildings by the Builder's Trading and Roofing Co (Formerly the Monarch Brick & Tile Co). Rooks Road, Mitcham.Dark glazed and fired terracotta ventilation brick with 15 holes moulded in the centre.ceramics, terracotta -
Ballarat Heritage Services
Ceramic - Artwork - Ceramics, Pottery Jug by Gellibrand Pottery
Jon and Alda Hubbard were operating Gellibrand Pottery around the late 1980s on the Old Beech Forrest Road in Gellibrand near Colac in the Otway region.Photo of a hand thrown jug with glaze decoration. It is stamped (impressed) "Gellibrand Pottery". ceramics, pottery, gellibrand pottery, studio pottery -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Framed Photographs, Kew Heights Sports Club Honour Boards, c.2010
Sports Clubs in Kew in the final decades of the 19th century and in the early 20th century were often umbrella organisations with facilities for a number of sports. Typically in Kew, this included teams in lawn bowls, tennis and croquet. The Kew Bowling Club was formed in 1880 while the privately owned Auburn Heights Recreation Club was opened in 1904. By 1998, the two Clubs decided to amalgamate at the Auburn Heights site in Barkers Road, forming the Kew Heights Sports Club. The combined club was itself taken over by the Melbourne Cricket Club in 2012 becoming MCC Kew Sports Club. In 2017 MCC Kew closed and its landholding was subsequently sold to Carey Baptist Grammar School. Both the Kew and Auburn Heights Clubs assembled important collections. These historically significant and large collections were donated to the Society in 2020. The collections include manuscripts, pictures, trophies, plans, honour boards etc. References Barnard FGA 1910, 'Sports and Pastimes' in Jubilee History of Kew Victoria: Its origin & progress 1803-1910. Chapman J & C 1999, The history of the Auburn Heights Recreation Club, 1904 to 1908. Reeve S 2012, City of Boroondara: Thematic Environmental History, p.216.The combined collections of the four sporting clubs making up the collection number hundreds of items that are historically significant locally. They are also significant to the sporting history of the greater Melbourne area and to the sports of lawn bowls and tennis in Australia in the 19th and 20th centuries. The collection illuminates two of the Victorian historic themes - 'Building community life' through forming community organisations and 'Shaping cultural and creative life' by participating in sport and recreation.Framed and glazed photograph of six honour boards of the Kew Heights Sports Club. kew heights sports club - barkers road - kew (vic) -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Framed Photograph, Red Brick House
Unidentified house. KHS welcomes viewers to identify the locationFramed and glazed small photograph of a red brick house in Kew or Kew EastNilhouses - kew - kew east -
Harcourt Valley Heritage & Tourist Centre
Cannie Ridge Pottery, mid 1970s
CANNIE RIDGE POTTERY OPENED SEPT 1976 BY ALLAN & MARY LETTS, AND SON GARY AND JENNY, APPROX 16 EMPLOYEES PRODUCED MEMORABILIA FOR THE POPE'S VISIT IN 1988 AND HOUSEHOLD ITEMS INCLUDING WINE BARRELS, GOBLETS, CASSEROLES, TEAPOTS, JUGS, PLATES AND EVEN DINNER SETS EACH bearing the distinctive Eucalyptus patterns.Products of a now-closed ceramic pottery located in Harcourt.BLUE GLAZED 5 SIZED CANNISTERS GUM LEAF MOTIF WITH BLUE LIDSCANNIE RIDGE STAMP ON BOTTOM -
Wodonga & District Historical Society Inc
Ceramic - Haeusler Collection Teacup, Saucer and Cake Plate
The Wodonga Historical Society Haeusler Collection provides invaluable insight into life in late nineteenth and early twentieth century north east Victoria. The collection comprises manuscripts, personal artefacts used by the Haeusler family on their farm in Wodonga, and a set of glass negatives which offer a unique visual snapshot of the domestic and social lives of the Haeusler family and local Wodonga community. The Haeusler family migrated from Prussia (Germany) to South Australia in the 1840s and 1850s, before purchasing 100 acres of Crown Land made available under the Victorian Lands Act 1862 (also known as ‘Duffy’s Land Act’) in 1866 in what is now Wodonga West. The Haeusler family were one of several German families to migrate from South Australia to Wodonga in the 1860s. This porcelain [CONFIRM] tea set is one of the many domestic objects in the Haeusler Collection that represent family and home life in early twentieth century Wodonga. DATED? This item has well documented provenance and a known owner. It forms part of a significant and representative historical collection which reflects the local history of Wodonga. It contributes to our understanding of domestic and family life in early twentieth century Wodonga, as well as providing interpretative capacity for themes including local history, social history, and women’s history.Teacup, sauce and cake plate set with pink glaze and cherry blossom design.No makers markhousehold, porcelain, tableware, social history -
Working Heritage Crown Land Collection
Ceramic - Ceramic shard, Mint ceramic shard
Ceramic shard with white glazed finish and a blue design with the letters E ME Mpottery, ceramic, archaeology -
Working Heritage Crown Land Collection
Ceramic - Ceramic shard, Mint ceramic shard
Ceramic shard with white glazed finish and a raised design with a gold floral patternfloral design in goldpottery, ceramic, archaeology