In 1987 Anne Goda was working on a master’s degree in American Civilization studies and decided to do her thesis on a little-known subject – a small redware pottery maker created by brothers Thomas ...
Redware is the common name for domestic pottery produced in New England between the 17th and 18th centuries. Redware was made primarily to meet the daily needs of preparing, serving, and storing food.
Lina Grundmann carefully rolled out the clay and shaped it over a mold inside the barn at the Berks County Heritage Center. The 16-year-old exchange student from the Saxony region of Germany near ...
Paul Epsom visits Selinda of Kennedy Redware in Muncy to learn how to create Redware Pottery using old ways. These designs are inspired by famous examples of early folk art found in museums and ...
Stahl’s Pottery Preservation Society has been celebrating the art of Pennsylvania German redware for 36 years at the Stahl’s Pottery site, 6826 Corning Road, Zionsville. A fall festival was added to ...
ZIONSVILLE — For 37 years, Stahl’s Pottery has celebrated the art of Pennsylvania German redware at the pottery site at 6826 Corning Road. The 37th Annual Summer Pottery Festival, held from 9 a.m. to ...
The exhibit opening Sunday at Landis Valley Village and Farm Museum is so expansive it will take two years to display it in its entirety. “Thrown, Fired, and Glazed: The Redware Tradition from ...
Functional, attractive and affordable, redware pottery was commonplace in American homes during the 18th and 19th Centuries. The brick-red clay that gave this porous earthenware its name was plentiful ...
The Mennonite Heritage Center, 565 Yoder Road, Harleysville announces a Sgraffito Redware Pottery Workshop scheduled for October 13, 2012 from 9 am to 3 pm. The workshop will focus on the sgraffito ...
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