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Author Topic: Riihimaki? Vase unusual colour  (Read 1734 times)

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Offline robert1960

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Re: Riihimaki? Vase unusual colour
« Reply #10 on: July 04, 2010, 12:17:21 PM »
Hi Chris
 I've never seen that colour or height/ proportion in a Riihmaki vase

Alhough it certainly has the 'look' about it  

I tihnk there is some difference of opinion as to what a ground and polished rim is, compared to a fire polished rim?

Robert

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Offline Lustrousstone

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Re: Riihimaki? Vase unusual colour
« Reply #11 on: July 04, 2010, 02:40:39 PM »
All these vases must have ground rims, as they have no base pontil marks. It's what happens next that's the question. They are then either polished on a wheel, which gives a lovely shine but leaves a sharp (I don't mean sharp as in able to cut you) angle on the edge. Sometimes these edges are also removed by grinding then polishing, which gives a chamfer to the rim (i.e., four angles). Or the top is whizzed under a very hot flame to add shine and remove the angles. This at is how mine is done.

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Offline robert1960

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Re: Riihimaki? Vase unusual colour
« Reply #12 on: July 04, 2010, 02:46:09 PM »
Ah!

Ok, that explains it better to me, Thanks!  :D

 The cheaper 'export' vases seem to have had the 'flame' treatment, the middling ones are ground and chamfered, much like, say, a Whitefriars coffin vase

Only a few, and I suppose where the design and cost demands it, seem to be tooled and hot worked to form a rounded lip.

Incidentally, the only Riihimaki vase I own with a pontil mark is the largest size of Sun vase

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