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Enamel bowls

For thousands of years, enameled metal was used for jewelry, decorative arts and in ancient Rome, Greece, and Persia. <br>In Germany in the mid-19th century, vitreous enamel developed. Metal is fired with a ground glass called "frit" and then heated enough to melt glass, not metal. Minerals are added to the colour of the frit. The process was used in ads, medical equipment, kitchen utensils, bathrooms, cookware, dishware, basins, and cupboard systems. Enamelware refers to cast iron or emailed steel.<br>

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Enamel bowls

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  1. Bowls of Enamel For thousands of years, enameled metal was used for jewelry, decorative arts and in ancient Rome, Greece, and Persia. In Germany in the mid-19th century, vitreous enamel developed. Metal is fired with a ground glass called "frit" and then heated enough to melt glass, not metal. Minerals are added to the colour of the frit. The process was used in ads, medical equipment, kitchen utensils, bathrooms, cookware, dishware, basins, and cupboard systems. Enamelware refers to cast iron or emailed steel. Ordinarily, early products were white. In most cases, Britain produced a dark blue rim of white enamelware. The cream-colored Swedish products are green trimmed. Even if many patterns and colors, the inside of an enamel cast iron pot, usually white, were developed over the years. Today's popular Dutch enamel sheets are white inside. The enamel cast iron. Blue-spotted enamelware was popular in the late 1800s. The 1890s marketed Enamel bowls as an alternative to the kitchen utensils that used plum and arsenic in their manufacture as an estimated nickel and steel. Graniteware mimicked the granite appearance. Originally it was called Granite Iron Ware, it was developed by Charles Stumer and created by the St. Louis Stamping Company. Finally, the word "graniteware" became a generic word for grey and white enamel goods. Subsequent designs included stenciled flowers, checkerboard prints, chicken wire prints, cartoons, marbling, fruits, polka dots, corazones, and sheets. Words of the intended contents, like flour, sugar, and tea, were printed on enameled canisters.

  2. Vintage enamelware is particularly cheap if it's worn, torn, or shows rusty spots. There is a demand for specific brands and types, however, as with most older goods. Collectors love unusual styles and colors. Scandanavian enamel goods prices are very high in the mid-20th century. Cathrine Holm's products are brightly colored with simple patterns for the Norwegians Grete Pryte Kittelsen company. The Lotus pattern is shown below. The top-dollar orders on the online auction sites were produced from the 1950s to the 1970s. You can date a few pieces by colour in the middle of the century. In the 1950s and 1960s, we had brilliant basic colors such as red, white, and light green. The autumn colors often show examples from the 1970's such as gold, dull orange, and green avocado.Small, sentimental designs of Enamelware have made a comeback yet again. They are helmed as something in a combination of both artsy and minimalistic. connect with us:- https://hypothes.is/users/juliaknightcollections https://www.climatecolab.org/members/profile/2709221 https://worldcosplay.net/member/985207 Source Link:- https://juliaknightcollection.blogspot.com/2021/06/bowls-of-enamel.html

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