This brochure describes the art of making Carolina pottery. This process is centuries old. The ancestors of the Catawbas made pottery for cooking and carrying water. After the arrival of the white settlers, Catawba Pottery became an article of trade
The development of an industrial pottery and porcelain industry in the colonies and the United State...
This painted stoneware figure of a young man carrying an armful of wood was made by Clara Maude Cobb...
This paper looks at the history of ceramics in North American culture and recreates pieces using anc...
This brochure describes the art of making Carolina pottery. This process is centuries old. The ance...
American Indian pottery produced by tribes living east of the Mississippi has been rare for over a h...
This collection consists of The History And Survival of Catawba Pottery written by Joyce Caputo on D...
This impressed pottery vessel was made by Nettie Harris Owl (c. 1872-1923), a Catawba woman who move...
The low fired earthenwares of eighteenth and nineteenth century Charleston and San Juan are associat...
Innovation Of Design: Early Ceramic Vessel Traditions In The Southeast The earliest pottery in North...
Ceramic vessel technology was first developed or adopted in three separate areas of the American Sou...
Colonoware is a low fired pottery tradition concentrated in the southeastern United States. It has b...
During the late eighteenth century, Catawba Indians in South Carolina experienced dramatic populatio...
Pottery represents one of the earliest complex technologies—that of changing a plastic material, cla...
Lillie Beck Bryson (1876–1951) was a Cherokee woman raised off the Qualla Boundary in Rabun Gap, Geo...
The results of a historic ceramic analysis and a general overview of the history of North Carolina’s...
The development of an industrial pottery and porcelain industry in the colonies and the United State...
This painted stoneware figure of a young man carrying an armful of wood was made by Clara Maude Cobb...
This paper looks at the history of ceramics in North American culture and recreates pieces using anc...
This brochure describes the art of making Carolina pottery. This process is centuries old. The ance...
American Indian pottery produced by tribes living east of the Mississippi has been rare for over a h...
This collection consists of The History And Survival of Catawba Pottery written by Joyce Caputo on D...
This impressed pottery vessel was made by Nettie Harris Owl (c. 1872-1923), a Catawba woman who move...
The low fired earthenwares of eighteenth and nineteenth century Charleston and San Juan are associat...
Innovation Of Design: Early Ceramic Vessel Traditions In The Southeast The earliest pottery in North...
Ceramic vessel technology was first developed or adopted in three separate areas of the American Sou...
Colonoware is a low fired pottery tradition concentrated in the southeastern United States. It has b...
During the late eighteenth century, Catawba Indians in South Carolina experienced dramatic populatio...
Pottery represents one of the earliest complex technologies—that of changing a plastic material, cla...
Lillie Beck Bryson (1876–1951) was a Cherokee woman raised off the Qualla Boundary in Rabun Gap, Geo...
The results of a historic ceramic analysis and a general overview of the history of North Carolina’s...
The development of an industrial pottery and porcelain industry in the colonies and the United State...
This painted stoneware figure of a young man carrying an armful of wood was made by Clara Maude Cobb...
This paper looks at the history of ceramics in North American culture and recreates pieces using anc...