![]() As its popularity increased, many of the other English potters began to make creamware as well. Wedgwood marketed these wares as Queensware after Queen Charlotte gave Wedgwood the honor of ordering a set. ![]() He was the first of the English potters to produce a cream-colored earthenware with a light-colored body. ![]() And at the far right, we see another boy seated with a parrot on his arm.Ĭreamware was created in the 1760s by Josiah Wedgwood. In conversation, we see two fashionably dressed women, a small child holding a pinwheel as he looks up, pointing to a group of chimes, and an older boy standing nearby. Decorated in enamels, both platesįeature a chinoiserie scene. We are pleased to offer this lovely pair of 18th century English creamware dishes made circa 1780.
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