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creamware vase
creamware vaseCreamware vase, Luxembourg, late 18th century; in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

earthenware

pottery
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tin-glazed earthenware dish
tin-glazed earthenware dishTin-glazed earthenware dish, Spain, first half of the 19th century; in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.

earthenware,pottery that has not been fired to the point of vitrification and is thus slightly porous and coarser thanstoneware andporcelain. The body can be covered completely or decorated with slip (a liquidclay mixture applied before firing), or it can beglazed. For both practical and decorative reasons, earthenware is usually glazed. To overcome its porosity (which makes it impracticable for storing liquids in its unglazed state, for example), the fired object is covered with finely ground glass powder suspended in water and is then fired a second time. During the firing, the fine particles covering the surface fuse into anamorphous, glasslike layer, sealing the pores of the clay body. There are two main types of glazed earthenware. One is covered with a transparent lead glaze; when the earthenware body to which this glaze is applied has a cream colour, the product is calledcreamware. The second type, covered with anopaque white tin glaze, is variously called tin-enameled, ortin-glazed, earthenware,majolica,faience, ordelft.

A crude, soft earthenware, excavated at a Neolithic settlement atÇatalhüyük, on the Anatolian Plateau of Turkey, and thought to be about 9,000 years old, is the earliest known pottery. Earthenware is still widely used in the 21st century, much of the commercially produced ware being heatproof and coldproof and thus practicable for cooking and freezing as well as for serving.

This article was most recently revised and updated byKathleen Kuiper.

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