This is Japanese. The mark is 古織 Koori. http://page13.auctions.yahoo.co.jp/jp/auction/r164481589
This is Sumidagawa ware. It's marked 香二, which is read Kouji or Kyouji, though sometimes just spelled Koji in English....
I'm just posting the link FYI. One comment there does raise the opium den connection.
Marked Qing, Yongzheng. This is said here to be a lamp, but note that some of the comments doubt age and authenticity, probably with good reason....
The top one is inscribed 绿峯 “Green Peak." The seal is the character 绿 for "green." The bottom one is inscribed 福祿壽, a standard wish for good...
This is Chinese. The mark is 玩玉 Wan Yu. This poster isn't positive, but thinks these are post-1949....
Certainly marked Yixing, but for the others I need some books I won't have access to till next month.
Japanese. Top one is marked 友松造 “Made by Tomomatsu" or "Yuushou" or "Yuuson." Bottom one is markedd 古松造 “Made by Furumatsu" or "Komatsu."
九谷玉苑 Kutani Gyokuen.
Gotheborg 490 gives the Japanese name readings for the characters 向田, not the characters 西田 that appear in your mark. The characters 西田 are...
Chinese. "Jingdezhen, Wen Tian Kiln." Contact information, in Chinese: http://company.xizhi.com/GS57080dd61f98ccc47a8b4683/
A token shaped like an old Chinese coin, but with the common New Year's greeting Gong Xi Fa Cai inscribed on it. The flyer concerns the...
You mean the foot rim? Obviously it can't be glazed unless there are spurs or unless the piece is fired upside down. I assume you're referring to...
I can't tell from looking at those photos whether it's a true celadon glaze, or just a green glaze of some sort. A true celadon glaze is...
永峰, mark of Eiho Porcelain. http://eiho-porcelain.com/product.html
Certainly Japanese; note the hiragana notation alongside some of the characters. On Asian works, signatures are most commonly lower left.
Lenox is being made in Indonesia, as is Wedgwood....
Stunned a reputable company would put "China" on the box but "Norway" on the item itself. Particularly because they seem to play so strongly on...
"Made in Jingdezhen."
Nobody seems quite clear where these jars were made, but the most reasonable explanation is S China, probably Guangdong or perhaps Fujian. Tang...
Separate names with a comma.