
Dating Chinese Porcelain By The Foot Rims - BidAmount Asian …
2020年3月3日 · Learning how to date Chinese porcelains requires a solid understanding of many elements that makes up a piece. From shapes, to glazes, marks, colors, painting styles and those unglazed foot rims. In this post we're going to focus on the later. Including examples from the later Ming Dynasty to the late Qing Dynasty.
Chinese Kangxi Porcelain Reign Marks-Feet - Blogger
2014年9月30日 · Porcelain dish with rounded sides. The dish has copper derived pinkish glaze, white at the rim and foot-rim. There is an inscription and 'pin-holes' on the base.
Ming Dynasty And Transitional Period Chinese Porcelains With …
2014年6月12日 · Object type: cup and foot-rim; Culture/period/dynasty: Ming dynasty; Longqing; Production date: 1567-1572; Production place: Jingdezhen
Ming Dynasty Blue & White Porcelain - BidAmount Asian Art …
Ming Dynasty Blue & White Porcelain from China with Reign Marks and Foot Rims A selection 1368–1644 Chinese porcelain representing a fairly good cross section of the types of blue and white examples found in the market today, with a few much rarer
Identifying Chinese Porcelain and Ceramics - Chinese-Antique …
2024年8月20日 · Checking the foot rim and base of an item provides the most relevant indications in view to age and/or approximate time of production (dating). The production process was subject to continuous improvement over the centuries.
How to Date Chinese Porcelain By The Foot Rims
Foot rims of Chinese porcelain items could be a very helpful tool when trying to determine whether they are genuine antiques or just one of many modern reproductions that are flooding the market at the moment.
How To Identify Antique Chinese Vase
For example, in the early Qing era, the foot rims were smoother, denser, and whiter than those of the later Qing era. In the period between the late Ming era to the Transition period, potters used super-white paste on the undersides and knife trims are visible on these vases as well.
Chinese Kangxi Porcelain - A Concise Field Guide | Skinner Inc.
2021年7月13日 · Foot Rim: An undercut or stepped foot rim is a defining characteristic of Kangxi porcelain. The rim is smaller than the ceramic base and pulled back from the edge, unglazed but finely potted. This design allowed a vessel to fit precisely into a wood stand in a way that would not obscure the glazed rim of the base.
Chinese | Shallow dish, Jun ware - The Metropolitan Museum of Art
This shallow dish with rounded sides and straight rim has a light blue glaze(1) that comes forth as grayish where it runs thin at the mouth. The mouth rim itself has a fairly dry appearance. The glaze ends in an uneven line just above the foot rim on …
Pyriform vase, possibly an imitation of Song Guan ware
This vase of elongated pear shape on a high, spreading foot is covered with a light blue glaze that exhibits both black and light brown crackle. The base is glazed; the unglazed foot rim has been coated with a thin glaze or dark brown dressing. The unglazed body on the inside is coarse and pale beige. The piece is very light in weight.