Posted 3 years ago
ho2cultcha
(5051 items)
i bought this as an18th Century Yongzheng Chinese Porcelain plate Qing Famille Rose. But i really don't understand how it can be distinguished from Qianlong - which would have been my first guess due to the texture and color of the glazes and that little rim design - red and gold - which looks iconic for Qianlong. But i know very little compared to the folks who dated it Yongzheng.
you are on the right track , a good performance of you
, rotten straw + opague = bo li lai = the coloring + overglazing
overglaze= th= implementation on top of of thje already exisisting glazed surface
( stacking or accumilation effect in this case very shallow overglaze IMO
there is no famille rose before 1720
it looks like ruancai = soft coloring , and back to basics opposite to Yangcai , which has more colours , and more mixture of the colors
i tend to yongzheng for the former reason , and for the reason that it is a quite simple and not an busy piece complicated (less panels etc more colored background
The reason why the rim is this way i do i think H2O is right but it is not the
the most important common denominator actually a diaper pattern is
but a very good academical question , where i don,t know the answer on
thank you apostata. i've learned this is the Yongzheng 'Ducks' plate. i found some others online and the ones in better condition were very pricey. Also - the wide rim designs fill the empty space. Qianlong pieces tended to have more negative space which became an important element in the overall design. [or something like that!]
what do you mean by rotten straw, etc...?
there are indicator,s for 18 ct porselein
the backsite needs to have afterglaring ( light blue)
the second is rotten straw coloring of the standing rim of the bottom
3 browning or orange color of the front rim
4 overglaze
thanks apostata. by 28 ct porcelain, do you mean that it's a very good piece or what? not quite sure what you mean...