Stoneware porcelain bowl in duck egg blue with mat gold rims mat interior and crystals.
Stoneware porcelain bowl in duck egg blue with mat gold rims mat interior and crystals.
Stoneware porcelain bowl in duck egg blue with mat gold rims mat interior and crystals.
Stoneware porcelain bowl in duck egg blue with mat gold rims mat interior and crystals.
Stoneware porcelain bowl in duck egg blue with mat gold rims mat interior and crystals.

Stoneware porcelain bowl in duck egg blue with mat gold rims mat interior and crystals.

Regular price
£35.00
Sale price
£35.00
Tax included.

Stock: 2 left

Stoneware Parian porcelain bowl in duck egg blue with mat gold rims mat interior and crystals. Not perfectly round.


Handmade hemisphere vessel.

Stoneware Parian porcelain, with real gold mat finish.

Very unique interior design with mat glaze and tiny melted crystals.

9cm in diameter and 4cm high English fine bone china stoneware bowl with mat gold rims. .

As each item is handmade each finish is slightly different they don't have factory perfection.

*Because of the nature of my work and the material i use it is unlikely that future copies of this item will be produced in the future.*

Here is a bit about Parian porcelain .

It was named after Paros, a Greek island renowned for its fine-textured, white marble of the same name. It was first made in England in 1846 which succeeded in producing a very perfect imitation of marble, both in surface and in tint. The marble Parian Ware captivated Victorians. It allowed the middle classes to possess articles of high art. And by the end of the 19th Century, every properly furnished Victorian parlor contained at least one piece of it. Victorians welcomed Parian’s inexpensive, small-scale copies of busts of literary and political figures, as well as its decorative vases, boxes and pitchers, adorning their homes with these ornaments to show their gentility. It’s been said that Parian had the same effect on statuary as the invention of the print to painting. Wedgwood named it "Carrara," after the Italian quarry patronized by Michelangelo. But it was Minton which coined the word "Parian" to suggest Paros, the Greek isle that furnished much of the stone used in the classical period. Thus, it quickly became the medium's generic name.

*please note the listing is for one vessel only*