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They have a claim to be Europe’s earliest hard-paste porcelain, he concludes.
After firing it has similar appearance and properties to hard-paste porcelain.
Hard-paste porcelain began to be manufactured in Sèvres after 1770.
In 1805 his company began to make a fine hard-paste porcelain in small quantities.
He discusses the vexing question of how to define hard-paste porcelain.
These were developed in an effort to imitate high-valued Chinese hard-paste porcelain.
The factory began making stoneware, which was then superseded by white hard-paste porcelain.
Hard-paste porcelain with a European aesthetic was created.
After 1770, hard-paste porcelain was produced in Bristol.
Bristol porcelain, like that of Plymouth, was a hard-paste porcelain.
The body of soft-paste is more granular than hard-paste porcelain, less glass being formed in the firing process.
They all made hard-paste porcelain tableware or figurines.
Instead, he produced Europe's first hard-paste porcelain.
Cookworthy made his first hard-paste porcelain at Plymouth.
Nevertheless, the patent ran for another fourteen years, though only for the manufacture of hard-paste porcelain.
Hard-paste porcelain can also be used for bisque porcelain.
However, by 1780 Bohemian kaolin was being used, resulting in snow-white hard-paste porcelain.
Thus, for a few years, Meissen retained its monopoly on the production of hard-paste porcelain in Europe.
By the late 17th century, Chinese hard-paste porcelain had become the great obsession of European rulers and aristocrats.
Hard-paste porcelain, Porcelain which had been fired to 1400 C in a reducing atmosphere.
Lladró figurines are made of hard-paste porcelain.
And with the development of hard-paste porcelain, which made possible both very fine detail and brilliant glazes, these figures grew ever more refined.
The porcelain was termed "soft" because of their lower firing temperates compared with hard-paste porcelain.
Herend products are made from hard-paste porcelain using a mixture of kaolin, feldspar and quartz.
The materials, which were quarried beginning in 1768, were used to produce hard-paste porcelain similar to Chinese porcelain.