Cool Mold China photos

Cool Mold China photos

A few nice mold china photos I found:

Image from web page 60 of “Staffordshire pottery and its history” (1913)
mold china
Image by Web Archive Book Images
Identifier: staffordshirepot00wedg
Title: Staffordshire pottery and its history
Year: 1913 (1910s)
Authors: Wedgwood, Josiah C. (Josiah Clement), 1872-1943
Subjects: Staffordshire pottery Potters Wedgwood ware
Publisher: London : S. Low, Marston &amp co. ltd.
Contributing Library: Robarts – University of Toronto
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Toronto

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Text Appearing Before Image:
the lathe soon after throw-ing, and therefore made thin and light. The claybody is homogeneous and smooth, showinggreater care in the preparation of the body.The ornamentation is delicate and artistic,and has been produced by sealing a soft piece ofthe clay on to the ware with a metal sealpressed more than the soft clay. There is no glaze,but a high fire has developed a ware so difficult as tobe practically forged solid. These items show thehand of the ex-silversmith in size and shape andfinish. The Burslem imitators—Garner and theWedgwoods—never made factors like these. Elers,though he might have stolen Dwights secrets, wentahead and showed the possibilities of potting. Heis stated also to have developed black ware of asimilar character by mixing oxide of man-ganese—the magnus of Dr Plot—with theclay body, and, though no identified pieces ofblack Elers ware can now be undoubtedly identified, 36 Q^/N^p i. Red china teapot, most likely by Elers. c. 1700.two. Sample of later date, with moulded spout. Stoke-on-Trent Museums.

Text Appearing Right after Image:
Samples of strong agate ware created by Wedgwood or Whieldon. c. 1760. From the Stoke-on-Trent Museums (see p. 74). To face p. 36 ELERS AND ART it is this black ware that his copyists chieflydeveloped.* For Nemesis overtook John Philip Elers, andin spite of all his secrecy, perhaps due to the fact of it,he was copied. Two potters, Twyford and Ast-bury,f a single of whom at least had currently produced potsafter neighborhood strategies in Shelton, set themselves in-dependently to obtain the arts of the Dutchman.To lull the suspicions of Elers, Twyford shammedstupidity, and Astbury, who was younger, passedhimself off as an idiot. Recommended by thesestrange qualifications, they asked and obtainedemployment and, in time, the information theydesired. They went back to Shelton with theiracquired arts, and, in a few years, the most in-telligent potters of North Staffordshire knew howto make civilized pottery. But by 1710 JohnPhilip Elers was tired of his exile and of the * Burton, English Earthenware, p. 74. t A list of tho

Note About Images
Please note that these photos are extracted from scanned page pictures that might have been digitally enhanced for readability – coloration and appearance of these illustrations might not perfectly resemble the original perform.

Mold
mold china
Image by Joshua Drew Vaughn
Not precisely positive what this is.

Cool China Plastic Molding Business pictures

Cool China Plastic Molding Business pictures

Some cool china plastic molding organization images:

“sampuru” fake food samples in a show case, tokyo, japan
china plastic molding company
Image by “guerrilla” method
Fake food samples seem prevalently in the windows and display circumstances of meals-serving establishments all through Japan. As soon as created from wax, right now they are typically produced out of plastic. The plastic models are largely handmade from vinyl chloride and cautiously sculpted to appear like the actual dishes. The models are custom-tailored to restaurants and even common items such as ramen will be modified to match every single establishment’s meals. In the course of the molding approach, the fake ingredients are typically chopped up and combined in a manner equivalent to actual cooking.

The craftsmanship has been raised to an art kind and plastic meals has been exhibited at locations such as the Victoria and Albert Museum. Normal competitions are held in making fake meals dishes out of plastic and other materials. The food displays are typically known as sampuru, derived from the English word sample.

The plastic food producers fiercely guard their trade secrets as enterprise is lucrative the plastic food market in Japan, by conservative estimates, has revenues of billions of yen per year. A single restaurant could order a complete menu of plastic items costing over a million yen.
In current years, Japanese plastic meals companies have been targeting markets overseas, such as China.

Plastic meals companies

Whilst some big businesses exist, other people are small shops with a single proprietor. They can be found in Kappabashi-dori, the meals provide street in Tokyo. Factories can be found in Gujō, Gifu.

Iwasaki Be-I, the largest plastic food manufacturer in Japan, founded by Takizo Iwasaki in 1932

Maiduru (Maizuru), another old and big manufacturer

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fake_food_in_Japan

Good Mold Maker In China photos

Good Mold Maker In China photos

A handful of nice mold maker in china photos I located:

Benn & Adelaide Pitman Bedstead
mold maker in china
Image by elycefeliz
www.discoveringthestory.com/goldenage/bed/background.asp

This mahogany bedstead was created by Benn Pitman on the occasion of his marriage to his second wife, Adelaide Nourse. Adelaide carved the decorative motifs on the bed, which was made for the Pitman house on Columbia Parkway. The interior of the home was decorated with carved floral and geometrical motifs based on native plant life. Every thing in the property was carved by hand, from the baseboards to ceiling moldings and all its furnishings.

The bedstead is Contemporary Gothic in style and is composed of a headboard, footboard, and two side rails. The headboard is divided into 3 sections: two lancet panels with egg molding and a central trilobate arch. The central panel is carved with a flock of swallows flying in the evening sky. The birds are depicted in different stages of relief, some practically 4 and a half inches from the headboard. Others are shown in low relief to suggest a sense of depth. Just below and to the correct of the birds is a crescent moon in low relief. Hydrangea blossoms in high relief are carved into the lower section of this panel. In the reduced left is a carved inscription that reads, &quotGood evening, good rest.&quot Extending above this is an arched hood that is carved with 4 panels of overlapping daises. The 4 finials of the headboard are carved in the shape of wild parsnip leaves.

In the two lancet panels on either side are painted photos of human heads on gold discs representing evening and morning. These panels have been painted by Elizabeth Nourse (1859-1938), Adelaide’s twin sister, who was an internationally acclaimed painter. To the left is Morning, surrounded by painted white azaleas. To the appropriate is Night, surrounded by balloon vines. The corners of these side panels are carved with stylized leaves and berries.

This bed, which occupied the Pitman’s bedroom, was meant to symbolize and celebrate sleep. Quickly soon after its completion, it received significantly acclaim and was exhibited in 1883 by the Pitmans at the Fifteenth Annual Exhibition of the Work of the School of Style of the University of Cincinnati and also at the Cincinnati Industrial Exhibition. In 1909 the bedstead and the rest of the bedroom were described in the Cincinnati Industrial Gazette: &quotIt is such a space in which a sufferer of insomnia would totter drowsily upon entering. The entire combination is created to symbolize &quotnight&quot and so faithfully is repose portrayed that sleep practically overcomes one particular inside the door. The bed is a masterstroke of human genius…and the whole combination appears covered with such a constant nocturnal veil as to make the words &quotgood night&quot at the bottom very unnecessary.&quot

72.249.182.183/collection/search.do?id=15453&ampdb=objec…

Artist/Maker Benn Pitman (American, b.1822, d.1910)
Elizabeth Nourse (American, b.1859, d.1938)
Adelaide Nourse Pitman (American, b.1859, d.1893)
Date 1882-1883
Medium American black walnut and painted panels
Credit Line Gift of Mary Jane Hamilton in memory of her mother Mary Luella Hamilton, produced feasible through Rita S. Hudepohl, Guardian

Benn Pitman, an expatriated Englishman, arrived in Cincinnati from Philadelphia in 1853. Although educated to be an architect, he traveled to America to promote the phonetic shorthand technique developed by his brother Sir Isaac Pitman. Sometime among his arrival and 1872, he created an extraordinary interest and talent in woodcarving. Pitman embraced the Aesthetic Movement and turned to nature for inspiration.

In 1872, carved furnishings, doors and baseboards created by the Pitman loved ones, which includes his wife, Jane, and daughter Agnes, were exhibited at the Third Cincinnati Industrial Exposition.

He taught woodcarving at the College of Design of the University of Cincinnati (later the Art Academy) from 1873 to 1892. He also invented an electrochemical approach for relief engraving (1855), was court recorder for the Lincoln assassination trial (1865) and wrote a biography of his brother (1902).

Adelaide Nourse Pitman, the twin sister of Elizabeth Nourse and youngest of ten youngsters, was born on October 26, 1859, in the Cincinnati suburb of Mt. Wholesome. Her parents had moved to Cincinnati from Massachusetts in the early 1830s. Her father, a banker, suffered critical economic losses following the Civil War. As a result of this loss, the girls were needed to assistance themselves. The twins enrolled in the University of Cincinnati College of Style, which charged only minimal tuition. Whilst at the University, Adelaide joined Marie Egger’s china painting class and began a number of years’ study of wood carving beneath Benn Pitman. She worked on the carving of the Cincinnati Music Hall organ screen, carved a quantity of architectural elements for the interior of the Ursuline chapel in St. Martin, and received a silver medal at the 1880 Cincinnati Industrial Exposition.

On August 10, 1882, Adelaide married Pitman in Sandusky, Ohio. She was twenty-two and he was sixty. Following their marriage, she continued to operate, beneath his supervision, in copper, silver, and brass, as nicely as on decorative wood carvings for the Pitman property on Columbia Parkway.

In 1883 she gave birth to her 1st youngster, who died in infancy. The couple’s second youngster, born July 5, 1884, was named Emerson. The third and final child born to the couple was their daughter, Melrose, born on November five, 1889.

Tragically, Adelaide Pitman died on September 12, 1893 of tuberculosis. She was only thirty-3 years old.

Elizabeth Nourse was a painter, sculptor, wood-carver, etcher, illustrator and decorative artist who accomplished her greatest success following 1887 as an expatriate in Paris. Born a twin in Mount Healthier, she enrolled in 1874 at the Cincinnati University College of Design and style, graduating in 1881. She had planned to continue her research in New York, but with the death of her father and the marriage of her sister, Adelaide, to furniture-maker Benn Pitman her plans changed.

Nourse studied for a couple of months at the National Academy of Style and from 1883-86 worked as a portrait painter spending component of every single summer time sketching and painting in the mountains of eastern Tennessee. It was the nearby individuals who would turn into her subjects. In 1887 she exhibited 4 watercolors at the Cincinnati Industrial Exposition and quickly soon after she and her older sister, Louise, left for what was to be a go to to France. They spent the rest of their lives abroad.

www.cincinnatiartmuseum.org/

Cool China Mold Generating photos

Cool China Mold Generating photos

A couple of nice china mold generating photos I discovered:

NYC – Metropolitan Museum of Art – Field Armor of King Henry VIII of England
china mold making
Image by wallyg
Field Armor of King Henry VIII of England
Steel, blackened, etched, and gilt textile and leather
Italian (Milan or Brescia), about 1544

This impressive armor was produced for Henry VIII (r. 1509-1547) toward the finish of his life when he was overweight and crippled with gout. Constructed for use on horse and on foot it was possibly worn by the king throughout this last military campaign, the siege of Boulogne in 1544, which he commanded personally in spite of his infirmities. The harness was initially fitted with a detachable reinforcing breastplate, to which a lance-rest was attached, and a reinforce for the left pauldron (shoulder defense). A pair of exchange vambrances (arm defenses) remain in the Royal Collection at Windsor Castle.

The armor is described in the post mortem inventory of the king’s possessions, drawn up in 1547, as &quotof italian mankinge.&quot It was possibly supplied by a Milanese merchant recognized in England as Francis Albert, who was licensed by Henry to import luxury goods, including armor, into England for sale. The armor was subsequently given to William Herbert, very first earl of Pembroke, Henry’s esquire and an executor of his will. It it recorded at Wilton House, seat of the Pembroke loved ones, from 1558 till it was sold in the 1920s. By the end of the eighteenth century, and till really recently, the armor was erroneously identified as obtaining belonged to Anne de Montmorency, Constable of France, its royal English origins obtaining been forgotten.

The armor is an early instance of the &quotanime&quot kind, in which the breastplate and backplate are constructed of horizontal overlapping plates connected and produced versatile by rivets and internal leather straps. The decoration, consisting of foliage, putti, running dogs and Renaissance candelabra and grotesque ornament, is typically Italian.

Harris Brisbane Fund, 1932 (32.130.7)

**
The collection of armor, edged weapons, and firearms in The Metropolitan Museum of Art ranks with those of the other great armories of the globe, in Vienna, Madrid, Dresden, and Paris. It consists of about 15,000 objects that range in date from about 400 B.C. to the nineteenth century. Even though Western Europe and Japan are the regions most strongly represented–the collection of a lot more than five thousand pieces of Japanese armor and weapons is the finest outside Japan–the geographical range of the collection is extraordinary, with examples from the Close to East, the Middle East, India, Central Asia, China, Southeast Asia, Indonesia, and North America. The Arms and Armor Galleries had been renovated and reinstalled in 1991 to show to far better effect the outstanding collection of armor and weapons of sculptural and ornamental beauty from about the planet.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art‘s permanent collection contains much more than two million operates of art from around the planet. It opened its doors on February 20, 1872, housed in a building positioned at 681 Fifth Avenue in New York City. Below their guidance of John Taylor Johnston and George Palmer Putnam, the Met’s holdings, initially consisting of a Roman stone sarcophagus and 174 mainly European paintings, speedily outgrew the available space. In 1873, occasioned by the Met’s acquire of the Cesnola Collection of Cypriot antiquities, the museum decamped from Fifth Avenue and took up residence at the Douglas Mansion on West 14th Street. Nonetheless, these new accommodations have been short-term following negotiations with the city of New York, the Met acquired land on the east side of Central Park, exactly where it constructed its permanent property, a red-brick Gothic Revival stone &quotmausoleum&quot created by American architects Calvert Vaux and Jacob Wrey Mold. As of 2006, the Met measures nearly a quarter mile long and occupies a lot more than two million square feet, a lot more than 20 times the size of the original 1880 constructing.

In 2007, the Metropolitan Museum of Art was ranked #17 on the AIA 150 America’s Favored Architecture list.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art was designated a landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in 1967. The interior was designated in 1977.

National Historic Register #86003556