Hotsell Talavera elegant Fruit bowl

$118.00
#SN.148886
Hotsell Talavera elegant Fruit bowl,

This is a large and elegant fruit bowl

It has no lead The colors of this.

Black/White
  • Eclipse/Grove
  • Chalk/Grove
  • Black/White
  • Magnet Fossil
12
  • 8
  • 8.5
  • 9
  • 9.5
  • 10
  • 10.5
  • 11
  • 11.5
  • 12
  • 12.5
  • 13
Add to cart
Product code: Hotsell Talavera elegant Fruit bowl

This is a large and elegant fruit bowl.

It has no lead. The colors of this orchard are so vivid that will add color to your kitchen. This elegant design sunflower. It's perfect for your fruits, vegetables ... Orchard Service on holidays or special occasions.

Measurements: 7 " inches high x 12" inches wide

https://www.etsy.com/mx/shop/Talaverapottery?section_id=15336367&ref=shopsection_leftnav_8

[ You like things in Talavera]
-----------------------------------------------
https://www.etsy.com/mx/shop/MexicanTiles
https://www.etsy.com/mx/shop/talaverapottery

SHIPPING ✈
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
All items are sent by registered mail with a tracking number, thank you!

Shipping: This item ships from Mexico, can spend 3-15 days. This is dependent on how fast you want the goods. I always look for the cheapest shipping price.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

The story is very old, this is the story of talavera .

The Puebla Talavera decorative keeps the same style as the original slab Talavera de la Reina in Spain . Several historians have given their free version to check it documented . The story is confused with the legend. The truth is that although Puebla pottery is decorated in the likeness of Talavera , this is not enough to assume that the first have been Talavera potters who came to Puebla. Well they could be Seville , Seville was point for emigration to Spanish overseas possessions and producer of earthenware and tile with Moorish influence center . Since then , a remarkable potter , resident of Puebla de los Angeles in 1604 , named Diego Gaytan, was a native of Talavera and would not influence , your personal style , the development of Puebla pottery industry .
Industry and enamelled glazed clay, unknown to the ancient Mexicans , went from Spain to Mexico in the second half of the sixteenth century. From 1580 Puebla is set in a number of master potters who find necessary materials in the vicinity to produce good quality ceramics , and turn the city into a shopping center that allows the sale of their goods to Mexico City and Veracruz.
Ceramic production became very abundant and each potter their parts manufactured at will , with no more than impose your own taste and custom. A mid-seventeenth century there were so many potters that Viceroy was the need to create the potters guild and regulate their trade. Thus in 1653 in Puebla are written ordinances that set the conditions for being a teacher of the craft , including the separation of the slab into three genres: thin , and common yellow ; the proportions in which the sludge should be mixed to produce good quality parts , and the rules to follow for the set , which stated that in the china painting should be trimmed with black to enhance their beauty; in addition qualities and manufacturing details were specified . Of note is the third article , which reads: " That can not admit that office exam , no black or mulatto , or other person disturbed color, so mind my entire hotsell satisfaction are Spanish and confidence. " Little has changed the process of making the pottery . Were decorated forms and those who suffered a major transformation due to stylistic influences from different countries and eras.
Talavera pottery , as a result of the ordinances of 1653 and 1682 enlargements , recorded a marked improvement ; the glaze is of a slightly milky white uniform beautiful , smooth and shiny , which highlight the strong and thin and features polychrome blue , yellow, green , orange , blue and black combinations.
The rise and splendor of Talavera spanned from 1650 to about 1750 , when it spread all over the territory of New Spain , Guatemala , Cuba , Santo Domingo, Venezuela and Colombia . The struggles of independence of the colonies , the disappearance of trade between them and the continued importation of English pottery and porcelain contributed to the closure of the workshops because they can not compete on price .

.
653 review

4.65 stars based on 653 reviews