It's a true rustic, IMHO. As AJ says, European, but which country, who knows? Whenever I see all that glaze on the base, I think Belgian, but...
Excellent results!
Not Royal Crown Derby, and has been ID'd above. However, it has the imari colours -- rust red, cobalt blue and gold -- and Royal Crown Derby...
Oh, and Welcome to Antiquers!
Turn of the 20th c, possibly late 19th. Very sweet. Not sure that a particular factory can be ID'd.
It could be I or J. A look at some copperplate capitals might decide the case.
Interesting! Learned something new today!
I stand corrected -- I know next to nuttin' about armorial crests, lion rampant means the one standing up. The phrase just stuck in my mind. :D
Welcome to Antiquers! Nicely done tile and a studio potter/artist IMHO. There was a "neo-deco" type design and decorating trend in the late 80s...
I don't think it's all that old, but I could be full of rubble, er, rubbish. I agree with tavern scene, maybe a pin or trinket dish? The surface...
Well there seem to be 2 separate marks -- the lion rampant and whatever that thing is on the left. Not a complete crest IMO.
Looks like a catalogue mark or similar to me.
I dislike AI for that reason -- it replies in a manner of talking with you as it thinks you would expect. I simply want the information. Your...
Hi @Maria M. and welcome to Antiquers. Yes, quite possibly Ernst, Bohn & Sohne and if so, would be early 20th c. There is a caveat with the...
Pierced if you're being non-fancy, reticulated if you're being fancy. :D What is the glaze/decoration supposed to look like? Stone/granite?
Bearing in mind that I know very, very little about European faience, I would think French because it came from France and that the decoration...
That is a cool map! Google AI info: Seventeenth-century paper was a handmade, plant-based material primarily composed of fermented linen and...
Huh, hard to see in the photo, but ceramic car mascot? Ya gotta be vewy, vewy careful!!
Stunning!
I think it's an honorific mark and your little vase is 20th c.
Separate names with a comma.