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Pottery ArticlesLatest craft, ceramic, porcelain, and pottery related articles from Pottery Centre. Feels free to register in our website and publish your own articles.

Please note that we only approve articles with related topic (craft, ceramic, pottery, porcelein).

Getting Started Selling Your Crafts

Until recently crafts were usually sold locally or, at best, regionally. Now you literally have the whole world at your fingertips! Some of you may choose a gradual progression from selling to friends, to selling at fairs and shows, to retail selling ? and so on. Others may decide to jump directly from selling within their circle of friends to the worldwide Internet market - the costs are low enough that this is surprisingly doable.

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How to Sell Your Crafts on eBay

Artists, crafts people and photographers are successfully selling their wares everyday on the online auction site, eBay. According to a recent analysis of eBay sales, a crafts-related item is sold every nine seconds, a scrapbook item is sold every minute, and 40 cross-stitch items sell in an hour on eBay. Sales of craft items on eBay have grown almost 60 percent in the past year, according to TheBidFloor.com.
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Silver Anomalies in Jerusalem Pottery

Herodion Street in Jerusalem, one of the areas where potsherds were excavated and analyzed for their silver content.[Silver anomalies found in Jerusalem pottery hint at wealth during second Temple period]

Scientists with the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Bar-Ilan University have discovered unusually high concentrations of silver in samples of many different types of pottery from excavations in Jerusalem of the late Second Temple period, the first century BCE (Before the Common Era) through 70 CE (Common Era). This is the first study ever conducted on silver in archaeological ceramics.

David Adan-Bayewitz, Associate Professor at Bar-Ilan in Ramat-Gan, Israel, and a guest at Berkeley Lab, and Frank Asaro and Robert D. Giauque of Berkeley Lab's Environmental Energy Technologies Division made their discovery of performing measurements on 1,200 pottery vessels from 38 sites in Roman Judea (present-day Israel). They used high-precision X-ray fluorescence (HPXRF) and instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA). The Berkeley Lab team developed a variation of INAA, the INAA coincidence technique, specifically for measuring silver concentrations in archaeological samples, as a more accurate means of checking the results of HPXRF and conventional INAA.

The major finding is that samples of pottery from Jerusalem during this era showed anomalously higher concentrations of silver, as compared to samples from all other non-urban sites dated to the same period of time. Many of the samples from Jerusalem and other sampled sites were otherwise indistinguishable in date, shape and chemical composition. High silver abundances were also detected in pottery found at other urban sites. But many of the Jerusalem samples had higher silver values than any of the samples from the other cities.

"Because pottery samples containing higher amounts of silver were all recovered from sites in cities, and because the cities were distant from one another," says Asaro, "we concluded that the silver anomalies are associated with human activity." Natural causes do not explain the geographical distribution of samples with high silver content. The researchers also concluded that silver was washed into the pottery through the action of groundwater.

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Reviving Chu Dau Village's ceramic crafts

(after a 300-year hiatus) After discovering that their predecessors had been skilled ceramic craftsmen, Chu Dau villagers sought to revive the tradition. Pham Thanh Long reports on the villagers’ challenges and successes.

History unearthed: Shards of ceramic pieces were discovered one to two metres beneath Chu Dau Village’s soil. From the cracked pieces, designers form new designs for the factory to put into mass production.Villagers like Dang Van Chuyen face two main obstacles when trying to produce ceramics: lack of investment funds and limited access to bank loans.

Chuyen, 44, is among 60 other households in Chu Dau Village whose major income comes from weaving rattan, a tropical Asian climbing palm used for weaving furniture, to decorate flowerpots for export.

"It’s frustrating because I know that if we could start making ceramics like our ancestors once did, our village would be lifted out of poverty," Chuyen said, "and we could honour the traditions of our village’s history and be recognised on an international scale once again.
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The History of Ceramic Pottery in Myanmar

Extracted from “Burmese Ceramics” by Sumarah Adhyatman and published by The Ceramic Society of Indonesia, 1985

Burmese PotteryNothing has ever been published on Burmese ceramics although the name Martaban, an ancient port in Southern Myanmar has lent itself to a group of large dark glazed earthenware and stoneware jars. A revised edition of the book TEMIPAYAN MARTAVANS concerning martaban jars found in Indonesia which was published in August 1984 by the Ceramic Society of Indonesia contains pictures and references to present production of Burmese jars in Upper Burma.

On a recent trip to Burma in November 1984 the author and her husband T K Adhyatman visited the archaeological sites in Pagan and some traditional kiln sites in Twante near Rangoon, Pegu, Sagaing and in Shwe Nyein in Mandalav District. We were not able to visit Martaban and Moulmein as the area is declared off limits for visitors, Some interesting finds can he reported.

Ceramic Trade 13th-17th century

Martaban and Mergui, harbours on the seacoast, might have been important links in the ceramic trade between China and India during the Song dynasty (907-1279), and possible also in the ceramic trade with Southeast Asia through Malacca. Song ceramics have been found in the Tenasserim area and from shipwrecks offshore (Pamela Gutman. This was also mentioned by Dr U Tan Shwe from the Burmese Archaeological Research Institute).
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Annual Okinawan Pottery Festival

Annual Okinawan Pottery Festival
USO Okinawa will be hosting the 2nd Annual Okinawa Pottery Festival in front of the Kadena USO this weekend, 18-19 Octob...
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Palestinian Pottery Maker

Palestinian Pottery Maker

A Palestinian pottery maker shapes the clay at a workshop in Gaza City. Photo courtesy: AFP.

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What is the benefit of Pottery Centre for Pottery Sellers?

By registering your self (company) as a pottery seller, you will have worldwide exposure to our visitors. Some active po...
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