lustreware
- Related Topics:
- pottery
- Hispano-Moresque ware
lustreware, type of pottery ware decorated with metallic lustres by techniques dating at least from the 9th century. One technique of Middle Eastern origin, which produced the famous Hispano-Moresque pottery in Spain and Italian and Spanish majolica, involved a multistaged process that produced a kind of staining of the ware. In a second type of lustreware, which was cheaper and less complicated, pigments containing salts of gold and platinum were used. Although inspired by the late 18th-century Spanish majolica dishes, it was an English invention that found its widest and most economical application throughout the 19th century.
Among the lustres produced in Spain were golden-greenish–tinged and tarnished-copper lustres, which in the 17th century tended to be replaced by bright-red copper lustres; in 16th-century Italy, ruby-red or golden-yellow lustres with nacreous reflections predominated. Because of a scarcity of gold during the Napoleonic Wars, most potters turned to a silver lustre that was produced with platinum chloride and was known as “poor man’s silver” for its resemblance to the more expensive Sheffield plate.