Hand-thrown from natural clay into simple but beautifully-shaped pottery, these large clay terra cotta pottery come in many finishing color options. A perfect choice for those who need big size pottery for decorating their homes.
Item number & color code
Item number of this Australia large clay terra cotta pottery series consist of a combination between Bisque shape code and color code. You may apply any of fourteen finishing color options to any of the Bisque shapes here.
Bisque shape: 05
D40.0 x H100.0 cm
250 pcs (in 40' container)
note:
shown in 304 copper color
Bisque shape: 06
D48.0 x H100.0 cm
168 pcs (in 40' container)
note:
shown in 305 burning dark green color
Bisque shape: 07
D55.0 x H100.0 cm
144 pcs (in 40' container)
note:
shown in 306 black-washed cream-washed color
Bisque shape: 08
D43.0 x H100.0 cm
192 pcs (in 40' container)
note:
shown in 307 black green color
Bisque shape: 09
D39.0 x H100.0 cm
260 pcs (in 40' container)
note:
shown in 308 green-washed color
Bisque shape: 09
D39.0 x H100.0 cm
260 pcs (in 40' container)
note:
shown in 309 blue-washed color
books on pottery and terra cotta
Pictorial Guide To Pottery And Porcelain Marks
This book features photographs of marks alongside their actual pieces for perspective. Other books simply show line drawings, but this massive encyclopedia educates collectors and researchers on what the marks actually look like on a piece of pottery or porcelain. Over 7,500 photographs of around 4,000 marks and items, from Abingdon to Zsolnay, are featured in this huge publication. Organized alphabetically by company, this book is the most user-friendly marks book you'll find, telling readers quickly what it looks like, when it was made, and who made it. Appraisers and dealers will find this guide extremely useful; they can learn a little bit about many different marks, rather than having to weed through extensive historical information on the thousands of marks produced. As an added feature, cross-referencing indexes are provided, by date, shape, and company.
This book is the first book on marks that is a pictorial reference, with actual photographs of marks alongside the pieces they appear on. Arranged alphabetically by company, this massive encyclopedia educates collectors and researchers on what the marks actually look like on a piece of pottery or porcelain. Over 7,500 photos of around 4,000 marks and items from Abingdon to Zolsnay are featured.

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