the finest decorations on porcelain dishes. The pigments, made smooth with fine oils, are applied layer by layer, flimsy and nuanced to the already fused glaze. At the end arises the traditional porcelain form on Neubrandenstein Bouquets from decorative fruit, which seems genuine to grasp. The painting of 'pictures' is much more complex than the flower painting of the manufactory, but it is precisely in Dresden that it is still cultivated with dignified meticulousness. Plates or cups of this collection: decorative solitaires and as a complete set overwhelmingly elegant.
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Dresden: Authentic and Unique, Excessively and Prestigiously. You must'nt be a porcelain specialist to recognise these pieces of art as of the Dresden genre - not to mistake with the Viennese manner or the gesture of Meißen.
has begun for a long time before the real foundation by Johann Carl Gottlieb Thieme in 1872. In a period of bloom in which in Dresden many house painters white china (Weissware) decorated, also produced Johann Carl Gottlieb Thieme decorative porcelain which he expelled with great success also in his small art dealer's shop and classical art action
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