Unmistakably Shiwan pomegranate red glaze 石榴红. By 博云陶坊 Bo Yun Taofang. They've been around for over 30 years and make nice stuff worth collecting,...
I have them new from the '80s to early '90s just like that.
Just a fake Kangxi reign mark on the bottom.
Takeyasu 武泰. https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/japanese-ww-ii-naval-officer-sword-133023087 Google for more.
As both the title and image itself demonstrate, that is Kinkakuji 金閣寺, the famous Golden Pavilion in Kyoto. The main stamps, including one...
That second character isn't 志 zhi. It's 治 zhi. So we have 明治 Mingzhi, reading Meiji in Japanese. As in Emperor Meiji and the period named for him....
Just some flowery poetry and a smudgy fake Qianlong mark.
This style is called Guangcai 广彩. I was very surprised to discover that there's still a firm in Hong Kong making these. Production of this sort...
Items like this were made in Hong Kong and Macau in the 1950s-70s during the US ban on Mainland Chinese imports. The sanctions were often avoided...
The last one is actually just "China Jingdezhen." That crystallized glaze wasn't produced in mass quantity till the late '80s - early '90s in...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zashiki_Hakkei https://www.adachi-hanga.com/ukiyo-e/items/harunobu034/
Much nicer than a typical souvenir. Probably from Bagan, the center of lacquer production in Burma. Look closely: those designs are engraved, not...
On a tea caddy, the lid usually fits pretty tight.
The mark is 二明. A name no doubt but offhand I can't find a reading for it (Chinese characters as used in Japanese have several potential readings).
When I see things like this I think of things servicemen brought back for mom in the 1950s after being stationed in Japan, things mom put up on...
http://www.caa-auction.com/art-asian-14D/ex_image/106-7.jpg
Lot of contention about that 羅森 "Luosen" or "Lawson" mark. Some think Japanese. Some think Chinese. Some think older, 1930s or so. Some think...
Red alabaster comes to mind as one possibility. http://www.alabaster.net/images/containers/red-alabaster-stacked-container-inlaid-uvarovite.jpg
While in China yellow jade often means quartz, natural or dyed, elsewhere I would not use jade for anything but nephrite or jadeite, and nothing...
Cloisonee -- unless it's very very special -- gets classed pretty firmly in my mind as a decorative item not a collectible, and prices reflect...
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