http://www.panteek.com/Hasegawa/index.htm Look for print SKJ139. The characters simply give the name of this particular type of Chrysanthemum in...
The mark with those characters could be used in both Japan and China. If those are cranes, then cranes are more frequently a Japanese motif.
The mark, upside down, is 純銀 literally "pure silver." Not sure why you've ruled out the possibility this is Chinese, though Chinese silver usually...
Sorry, though I have no problems with it. Anyway, nothing there but a text description of the company and its products in Chinese, no pictures.
The mark is 御龍窯 Yu Long Yao "Imperial Dragon Kiln," not that you should take it literally. There's no connection with traditional Dehua ware...
Yes, Chinese. http://h5.m.taobao.com/moshtml-cn/detail/18402179046.html (You may need to click the red bar at the bottom to show the images.)
Takarabune, Japanese bronze treasure ship.
Fake Qianlong reign mark. Possibly Japanese.
Japanese, marked 井元, read Imoto or Inomoto.
Japanese, Kutani.
Japanese, Kutani Sengaku. http://litaxulingkelley.blogspot.in/2014/08/kutani-sengaku-plate.html?m=1
"Hong Kong" is there as well. And "labour" better translated as "worker" or "labourer." Probably for a check-in check-out board or such.
It's just a name and address, in both Japanese and English. Not necessarily the artist's. There's no date there. The numbers are part of a...
The mark -- you've got it upside down -- is 西山, read Xishan in Chinese and usually Nishiyama in Japanese.
One mark reads 平貴 Pinggui, probably a Chinese given name here. The other reads 原创 "original creation."
There's a utility model registration number there. You might search it at the Japanese Patent Office when the site is available again....
It purports to be a work by the Japanese artist Kano Seisenin, but his works are copied, so you'd have to have someone knowledgeable look at this.
Marked 富山, most likely read Tomiyama or Toyama.
Search "Chinese Copper Dragon Cup" on Google Images and there it is. (The counting-the-claws approach was pretty well debunked years ago by a...
Yes, it says "Meiji," but has anyone ever come across a mark that just says Meiji on a piece of genuine Japanese Satsuma dating from the Meiji...
Separate names with a comma.