A Treatise on the Progressive Improvement: And Present State of the Manufacture of Porcelain and GlassLongman, Reese, Orme, Brown, and Green, 1838 - 334 Seiten |
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Seite viii
... mixed . Advantages of this Plan . - Ineligible in England . - - 35 - - CHAP . IV . ON THE FORMATION OF UTENSILS . - Throwing . Potter's Lathe . - Thrower . - Mode of Proceeding . - Profiles . Slurry . Gauges . Turning Lathe . - Turning ...
... mixed . Advantages of this Plan . - Ineligible in England . - - 35 - - CHAP . IV . ON THE FORMATION OF UTENSILS . - Throwing . Potter's Lathe . - Thrower . - Mode of Proceeding . - Profiles . Slurry . Gauges . Turning Lathe . - Turning ...
Seite xi
... . - Blown Plates limited in Size . Cast Plate Works at Ravenhead . — Difficulties of the Process.- Mate- Various Compositions . - Borax . - Mixing Materials . — Fritting rials . - - - -Furnaces and Crucibles at St. Gobain . - CONTENTS . xi.
... . - Blown Plates limited in Size . Cast Plate Works at Ravenhead . — Difficulties of the Process.- Mate- Various Compositions . - Borax . - Mixing Materials . — Fritting rials . - - - -Furnaces and Crucibles at St. Gobain . - CONTENTS . xi.
Seite xiii
... Mixed Glasses . - Their specific Weight . - Method of determining this . - Influence of Tem- perature on the specific Weight of Glass . 261 CHAP . XIII . ON THE ART OF COLOURING GLASS . - - Analysis of these Its great colouring ...
... Mixed Glasses . - Their specific Weight . - Method of determining this . - Influence of Tem- perature on the specific Weight of Glass . 261 CHAP . XIII . ON THE ART OF COLOURING GLASS . - - Analysis of these Its great colouring ...
Seite 6
... mixed with oil . It has been asserted that the ancient Britons were in the practice of making pottery before the invasion of this country by the Romans ; and in support of this belief is brought the fact , that urns of earthenware have ...
... mixed with oil . It has been asserted that the ancient Britons were in the practice of making pottery before the invasion of this country by the Romans ; and in support of this belief is brought the fact , that urns of earthenware have ...
Seite 26
... mixed with it , as clay , when absolutely pure , does not emit any odour . Clay forms with water a plastic paste , having considerable tenacity , and which , by the action of heat , is brought to a very great degree of hardness : it is ...
... mixed with it , as clay , when absolutely pure , does not emit any odour . Clay forms with water a plastic paste , having considerable tenacity , and which , by the action of heat , is brought to a very great degree of hardness : it is ...
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A Treatise on the Progressive Improvement, and Present State of the ... George Richardson Porter Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2012 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acid alkali already annealing antimony appear applied artist baking basaltic borax brought calcined China Chinese clay cobalt colour composed composition compound considerable contain copper crown glass crucible degree of heat described diameter earth earthenware effect employed enamel equal felspar fire flint glass fluid flux furnace fused fusible fusion glaze gold grinding Guinand gypsum imparting inches ingredients kao-lin kiln kind labour lime litharge Loysel manganese manner manufacture mass materials means melted glass ment metallic oxides minium mixed mixture mould nitre occasion operation ornaments oxide oxide of iron oxide of lead painting perfect perfectly pieces placed plate glass polished porcelain portion potash pottery powder preparation produced proportion purpose quantity Ravenhead rendered requisite sand seggars silex silica soda specific gravity specimens substance sufficiently surface temperature thickness transparent tube various varnish vessels vitrified ware weight wherein whole workman
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 127 - Yet, by some such fortuitous liquefaction, was mankind taught to procure a body, at once, in a high degree, solid and transparent, — which might admit the light of the sun, and exclude the violence of the wind : — which might extend the sight of the philosopher to new ranges of existence ; and charm him, at one time, with the unbounded extent of the material...
Seite 126 - Who, when he saw the first sand or ashes, by a casual intenseness of heat, melted into a metalline form, rugged with excrescences, and clouded with impurities, would have imagined, that in this shapeless lump lay concealed so many conveniencies of life, as would in time constitute a great part of the happiness of the world...
Seite 15 - Dunstable, to seek a remedy for a disorder in his horse's eyes ; when the ostler at the inn, by burning a flint, reduced it to a fine powder, which he blew into them. The potter, observing the beautiful white colour of the flint after calcination, instantly conceived the use to which it might be applied in his art.
Seite 127 - ... of nature, and succour old age with subsidiary sight. Thus was the first artificer in glass employed, though without his own knowledge or expectation. He was facilitating and prolonging the enjoyment of light, enlarging the avenues of science, and conferring the highest and most lasting pleasures ; he was enabling the student to contemplate nature, and the beauty to behold herself.
Seite 16 - Its excellent workmanship, its solidity, the advantage which it possesses of sustaining the action of fire, its fine glaze impenetrable to acids, the beauty and convenience of its form, and the cheapness of its price, have given rise to a commerce so active and universal, that, in travelling from Paris to...
Seite 17 - Basaltes ; a white and a cane-coloured porcelain biscuit, both smooth and of a wax-like appearance ; and another white porcellaneous biscuit, distinguished as jasper, having in general all the properties of the basaltes, with a very important addition, the capability of receiving through its whole substance, from the admixture of metallic oxides, the same colours as those oxides communicate to glass or enamel in fusion. This peculiar property...
Seite 16 - Parts to Petersburg, from Amsterdam to the furthest part of Sweden, and from Dunkirk to the extremity of the south of France, one is served at every inn upon English ware. Spain, Portugal, and Italy are supplied with it ; and vessels are loaded with it for the East Indies, the West Indies, and the continent of America.
Seite 20 - The coasting vessels, which, after having been employed at the proper season in the Newfoundland fishery, carry these materials coastwise to Liverpool and Hull, to the amount of more than 20,000 tons yearly ; and at times when, without this employment, they would be laid up idle in harbour.
Seite 20 - Though the manufacturing part alone in the Potteries, and their immediate vicinity, gives bread to 15 or 20,000 people, yet this is but a small object when compared with the many others which depend on it...