A group of Grimwades 'Wattle' pattern & other serving china, transfer decorated in brown and blue, two oval lidded vegetable dishes, a side and dinner plate and an underplate, two sauce tureens, another lidded vegetable dish, two dinner plates and an oval platter, and two rectangular platters, late 19th century. (12)
- Transfer Printed / Decorated Transferware - Transfer printing is method of decorating ceramics, reducing the cost of decoration when compared to employing artists to paint each piece. A print was taken on transfer-paper from an engraved copperplate, covered in ink prepared with metallic oxides, and the image on the paper was then applied to the biscuit-fired ceramic body. The print was fixed by heating the object in an oven, and then glazed, sealing the picture. Early transfer prints were blue and white, as cobalt was the only colour to stand firing without blurring. Early in the 19th century advances in the composition of the transfer paper resulted in better definition and detail, and enabled engravers to combine line-engraving with stipple.
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