Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Ashtray

In Pottery > Show & Tell and Tobacciana > Ashtrays > Show & Tell.
Tobacciana1168 of 4160Dogged outVintage Depression/ Pressed Glass Electric Blue Ash Tray
3
Love it
0
Like it

antiqueroseantiquerose loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
racer4fourracer4four loves this.
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 7 years ago

    Tech-Antique
    (1 item)

    This ashtray is 12.5 cm by 10cm we think Origin is Austrian. It is made out of ceramics and has a unique and interesting design

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Pottery
    See all
    Antique Rookwood William Hentschel Arts & Crafts Rose American Art Pottery Vase
    Antique Rookwood William Hentschel ...
    $250
    RARE VINTAGE CERAMIC LADY WITH WHIPPED CREAM HAT HEAD VASE
    RARE VINTAGE CERAMIC LADY WITH WHIP...
    $207
    INCREDIBLE QUALITY 19thC HUGE FRENCH PARIS PORCELAIN ENAMEL BIRD SCENIC VASE #1
    INCREDIBLE QUALITY 19thC HUGE FRENC...
    $255
    Mummy Coffee Mug face jug pottery sculpture by folk art maker Mitchell Grafton
    Mummy Coffee Mug face jug pottery s...
    $449
    logo
    Antique Rookwood William Hentschel Arts & Crafts Rose American Art Pottery Vase
    Antique Rookwood William Hentschel ...
    $250
    See all

    Comments

    1. vetraio50 vetraio50, 7 years ago
      It's actually Australian. Dyson Studios.
      June Dyson. Lorrant Studios.

      The Rameking says : " June Dyson, 20.11.1918, 28.07.2004
      June spent her early years in Tennyson Street St Kilda (an inner suburb of Melbourne) and enjoyed the social scene thanks to her socialite mother Mrs (Edward) Dyson. Her father, Edward Dyson was a successful poet and author and her uncle Bill, a well known political cartoonist and the Australian Government's official war artist during the First World War.

      In her early 20s, she commenced studying pottery at the Royal Melbourne Technical College (now RMIT) under the legendary John Barnard Knight and Klytie Pate. The Dyson Pottery studio was based in Melbourne, but in 1958, she opened another studio in Gembrook in the Dandenong Ranges. The area was a favourite amongst potters. William Ricketts had worked in the area for decades. These pieces are both incised with "Lorrant Studio" and are press moulded, mostly in good condition with a few glaze bubble spots from firing and some minor wear marks.

      Lorrant is, according to Ford, her maiden name. It was actually Dyson, so where “Lorrant” comes from, I do not know. This mark was only used at the start of her career in 1945 and changed to “Dyson Studios” in the late 1940s. June formed a working, as well as a personal partnership with her scientist husband Colin who became the company's Business Director. It was June's second son Andy, who showed most interest in the pottery, helping out in her studios from his early twenties.

      June produced thousands of items, some plain, like these ramekins, some decorated, like the cornflower pattern on another post. Slightly rough and ready style are indicative of Dyson's studioware. June continued her own work until the late 1980s, but continued with the Warrandyte potters almost until her death.

      Her son, Robert (Andy) Gordon began working on his own as a potter in 1979 and the successful Robert Gordon Pottery continues today near Pakenham in Melbourne’s outer south east." (http://rameking.blogspot.com.au/2011/01/lorrant-studio.html )

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.