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<p>[QUOTE="Joe2007, post: 1043780, member: 1262"]Please post your Roseville Art Pottery! All pieces and lines welcome! Lets see them all!</p><p><br /></p><p>Roseville Pottery was founded in 1890 in Roseville, Ohio but moved its factory to Zanesville, Ohio in 1898. The first pieces of Roseville were utilitarian in nature but the pottery quickly moved to high quality art pottery. In the teens as the demand for quality faded, Roseville began to produce mostly commercial wares in large quantities.</p><p><br /></p><p>Roseville Pottery has many lines/patterns, many prominently depicting a flower in their designs. Each of these lines has a number of different shapes and usually several primary glaze colors that the pottery could be purchased in. Roseville ceased operations in 1954.</p><p><br /></p><p>There are many collectors of Roseville Art Pottery some of whom try to collect all of the different shapes in a particular pattern while others collect a variety of pieces from the different lines. Condition is usually very important to collectors of art pottery and most prefer pieces free of issues such has chips, cracks, repairs, and other blemishes. Prices for Roseville Art Pottery hit their peak in the mid 2000's and have significantly declined since then. Many of the reference books produced a decade ago should not be relied upon for accurate pricing data. Roseville Art Pottery has many dedicated collectors and is celebrated in Southern Ohio each year in a series of festivals that bring in collectors from around the world to the Zanesville, Ohio area.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Joe2007, post: 1043780, member: 1262"]Please post your Roseville Art Pottery! All pieces and lines welcome! Lets see them all! Roseville Pottery was founded in 1890 in Roseville, Ohio but moved its factory to Zanesville, Ohio in 1898. The first pieces of Roseville were utilitarian in nature but the pottery quickly moved to high quality art pottery. In the teens as the demand for quality faded, Roseville began to produce mostly commercial wares in large quantities. Roseville Pottery has many lines/patterns, many prominently depicting a flower in their designs. Each of these lines has a number of different shapes and usually several primary glaze colors that the pottery could be purchased in. Roseville ceased operations in 1954. There are many collectors of Roseville Art Pottery some of whom try to collect all of the different shapes in a particular pattern while others collect a variety of pieces from the different lines. Condition is usually very important to collectors of art pottery and most prefer pieces free of issues such has chips, cracks, repairs, and other blemishes. Prices for Roseville Art Pottery hit their peak in the mid 2000's and have significantly declined since then. Many of the reference books produced a decade ago should not be relied upon for accurate pricing data. Roseville Art Pottery has many dedicated collectors and is celebrated in Southern Ohio each year in a series of festivals that bring in collectors from around the world to the Zanesville, Ohio area.[/QUOTE]
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