Archive for July 7th, 2009

Where can I get the acrylic lamps featured on KYLE XY this week?

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009
Michael K asked:


This week on KYLE XY during the “Geek Scene” in the college recreation room, there were modern acrylic floor lamps about 5 to 6 feet tall in the background. I am great at recognizing different modern contemporary furniture artists, but this one has me stumped. They looked like tall skinny mushrooms and came in primary colors. Someone reccomended “Barnes and Noble” which produced nothing. Help please! I love these lamps!

Outdoor Solar Lighting
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Lamps - Made in the U.s.a

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009
Maurice Robertson asked:


The Antique and Vintage Table Lamp Co are well known for their varied range of antique and vintage table lamps, with decorative lighting from England, France China and Japan. Included in their range are  examples of American made glass lamps.

Currently,The Antique and Vintage Table Lamp Co  have examples made in the States from the early 1930’s period, with glass lamps made by the Consolidated Glass Company. This famous American glass maker was located in Pennsylvania, with Reuben Haley as the leading designer.  The art glass produced through this period is of outstanding quality and was greatly inspired by the French company of Rene Lalique. 

The company was greatly reduced by the Great Depression and was closed from 1932 - 1936.  Consolidated continued to produce very fine art glass through the 1940’s and 50’s but eventually closed, due to a factory fire in 1963.

Also listed in their on-line catalogue, a tall, U.S studio made, earthenware lamp with an arresting mega blast monochrome glaze of bright sunshine yellow!  This American lamp was hand thrown by a studio potter in the 1920 - 1930 period.  The lamp was designed to follow the form of the classical antique ”Yen Yen” shape produced by the Chinese porcelain makers of the 18th century.  This studio piece was produced as a lamp and has been carefully looked after for the past 80 years, now completely refurbished and ready to shed it’s light again in a new interior.

                                  

A tall, American art studio, wheel thrown,

 earthenware table lamp in Chinese form.

The lamp produced in the 1920 to 1930 period in a typical,

 rather curvaceous Art Deco style.

Although a product of the Art Deco, its line follows the classic form

of the Chinese “Yen Yen” shape of early 18th century porcelain,

(particularly associated with the Kangxi period),

“a long necked baluster style vase rising to a trumpet shaped mouth”.

The lamp glazed with a mega watt burst of bright sunshine yellow.

The lamp on a turned maple wood base, lacquered in Chinese black,

the lamp cap of polished brass.

Art Deco - Circa 1930

 

 

 All the company’s lamps are “one-of-a-kind”  designs and are completely original.  Each unique lamp is bench made with no aspect of repetitive production.

The company caters for the discerning buyer who knows that “the ordinary won’t do”, who demands more than mass produced products that roll off the conveyer belt in their thousands.   Their lamps are completely hand made with the majority of their collection being genuine antiques, i.e., 100 years old or older.

Please remember that The Antique & Vintage Table Lamp Co ship lamps, ready wired for the U.S, the U.K and Australia.

You are invited to visit The Antique & Vintage Table Lamp Co’s web site at     www.antiquelampshop.com

© The Antique & Vintage Table Lamp Co 2009



How To Choose The Perfect Fireplace
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Antique Lamps – A Bat Printed Staffordshire Lamp

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009
Maurice Robertson asked:


The invention of transfer printing on porcelain and pottery was, without doubt, one of the most important innovations in the development of the ceramic industry.

The honor of this development goes to the English engraver, Robert Hancock, born in Birmingham (1730-1817).  We first meet Robert, recorded as a copper plate engraver at York House, at Battersea’s enamel works in London.  Here, beautiful little copper boxes were made for the English 18th century luxury market and quite costly objects of vertu, the so-called bijouterie, scent bottles, little snuff boxes and practical wares, such as boxes to contain sewing implements, toothpicks, trays to hold pens, canisters for tea and sugar and even candlesticks, designed to imitated expensive silver pieces.

In 1756 the Battersea factory closed and we next find Robert at the Worcester porcelain factory in the same year. Robert Hancock had obviously taken his knowledge and expertise to the factory management, under the direction of Dr John Wall.

The management was highly impressed with the idea of this rapid decoration technique!  Since the opening of the factory in 1751, porcelain painting had been a laborious and expensive process, undertaken by painters with coloured powdered enamels, mixed with lavender oil and brushes.

Robert was able to teach his printing skills and the process was soon mastered with the first, famous, copper plate engraved, black transfer print being produced in 1757.  The subject being Frederick the Great, King of Prussia, ally and hero of the seven years war.

Transfer printing as developed at Battersea, began with the unique skill of the copper plate engraver, who deeply engraved, with a fine sharp steel, the desired design.  The design was engraved in reverse!, allowing the final print to appear “right way around”.  Pigment was then added, often mixed with oil and heated to allow the colour to run deeper into the copper plate engravings, the excess ink then wiped away with a palette knife.  The copper plate, after being cleaned off with a cloth was then covered with a sheet of tissue which was dampened and pressed onto the plate.  Next, the tissue was gently lifted from the plate and set carefully onto the shape to be printed. As the tissue was deftly lifted away, the design was left behind. This early printing style left the print on top of the glazed item, which was then fired to finally set the print onto the glazed surface.

As the 18th century turned into the early 19th century, new ceramic printing techniques were developed, to not only improve the technique, but make it faster, time is money!  The great name at this point is Josiah Spode who is credited with the introduction of under glaze blue transfer printing into Staffordshire, during 1781-84.

During the early 1800’s, the tissue was replaced by a sheet of paper, or sometimes fabric.  With a layer of glue applied, this could easily be cut and shaped to fit around curved objects such as dishes and teapots. This is known as the “bat” print and gives the process its alternative name “bat printing”.  The inked bat was then placed on the ceramic object and an impression left, leaving the print adhering to the shape. The item was then dipped into the glaze and returned to the kiln for the glost, or, low firing. The glue bats were reusable, plus they conformed better to curved surfaces.  Cobalt blue, under glaze transfer printing became a standard of the Staffordshire pottery industry.

Men like Josiah Spode, Wedgwood, Thomas Minton and others, were all entrepreneurial types and leading figures of the great Staffordshire ceramic industry.  While sharing amicable business relationships, each kept an eye on the market!   It was at this time that large export markets were opening or expanding in North America, Europe, and India where consumers sought elegant, matched sets of wares.



The Antique and Vintage Table Lamp Co illustrate a charming little English, Staffordshire, pottery accent lamp.  The lamp with a cream coloured glaze and very finely printed in sepia with two “named views”.  The front of the lamp with “Abbotsford, Selkirkshire, Scotland”, the reverse side printed with, “Chatsworth Derbyshire”.  The lamp with elaborately modelled, silver shaped handles.  The neck of the lamp delicately gilded with a formal motif. The rim and circular lamp base gilded, the gilding in very fine condition.  The lamp seated on a custom made, polished, maple wood base.  The custom-made lamp cap of gold plated bronze. 

Circa 1840       Overall height (including shade) 17″/43cm  



The Antique & Vintage Table Lamp Co specialise in antique table lamp lighting with an on line range of over 100 unique, antique and vintage table lamps on view.

Lamps are shipped ready wired for the U.S, the U.K and Australia.

For more information you are invited to visit their web site at:-

 

www.antiquelampshop.com



How To Build A Fireplace
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