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USA-FL-RNCHO CUCAMONGA Azienda Directories
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Azienda News:
- Antiques: The rise and fall of California pottery
By the 1930s, art pottery as a cottage industry was booming in the Golden State More than 300 makers were spread up and down the coast, making everything from table and kitchenware to figurines
- California Originals - Francines Figurines
HISTORY California Originals originated in 1945 as Heirlooms of Tomorrow in Manhattan Beach, CA The ladder made very fine quality porcelain lace figurines of the Victorian age It is unknown when the company moved to Torrance, CA, but it was at this time when the company’s name was changed to California Originals
- Collecting California Originals Pottery - LiveAbout
History of the Company California Originals had it starts in 1945 as Heirlooms of Tomorrow, making fine quality porcelain lace figurines How the company changed directions from those intricate figurines to the brown cookie jars it's became known for is a mystery to me!
- California Pottery - Old
Pottery Forum About this Site Contact Info Antique Pottery Values Buy Antique Pottery Sell Antique Pottery Cleaning - Restoring : California Pottery A Brief History The heyday of California Pottery was from the 1920's through the 1950's There were a number of talented artisans producing colorful and dramatic designs in the
- California Potteries and Marks - Kovels
Pottery Location Dates American Pottery Los Angeles, California 1940–1946 Architectural Pottery Los Angeles, California 1950–1971 Batchelder Ceramics Pasadena, California 1936–1951 J A Bauer Pottery Los Angeles, California 1909–1962 Marc Be
- California Pottery - Collectors Weekly
The phrase “California pottery” generally brings to mind the mid-20th-century output of Southern California potteries such as Bauer, Gladding-McBean, Metlox, Pacific, and Vernon That’s understandable, since those “big five” firms, as they are known, produced countless vases, pitchers, and plates, as well as acres of ceramic tiles
- Rediscovering the Ceramic History of the California Frontier
Local Pottery Prior to the Smithsonian California Pottery Project, Julia Costello, Ron May, and Jack Williams pioneered the study of locally made ceramics Costello and Williams independently examined a collection of more than 1,800 fragments of unglazed ceramics excavated by Donald M Howard at Mission San Antonio de Padua in 1972
- CALIFORNIA ORIGINALS POTTERY - Facebook
The latter eventually overtook the original company name as their desired moniker around 1955 along with a move to Torrance, California The company continued producing a large number of items in a surprisingly diverse number of styles through the 60's and 70's before finally closing their doors toward the mid-80's
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