Table of Figures
- Fig. 1: North Wales and Merseyside
- Fig. 2: Cross-section to show faulting
- Fig. 3: Estate map `The Lordship of Ewloe 1757', detail inset shows three kilns
- Fig. 4: Buckley potteries
- Fig. 5 (a-d): Six handled mug, brown glaze, yellow slip-trailing, Large storage vessel, brown glaze, yellow slip-trailing, Sgraffito tobacco jar and jug, and Selection of sgraffito-decorated vessels
- Fig. 6 (a-d): Chest of drawers, Rustic ware, Vase, red earthenware, yellow slip and sgraffito design, and Powell's Pottery advertisement photograph
- Fig. 7: Plan of Brookhill pottery
- Fig. 8 (a-c): Sgraffito designs
- Fig. 9: Silk damask, Florentine, 15th century
- Fig. 10: Ceiling paper, Cambridge c.1509
- Fig. 11 (a-d): Designs of dragons, tulips, leaves and floral motifs on 17th century Lancashire oak furniture in the Towneley Hall Art Gallery and Museums, Burnley
- Fig. 12: Sheets of designs for needlework
- Fig. 13: The Family Tree
- Fig. 14: Influence in Literature
- Fig. 15: Buckley dish with slip-trailed fish decoration
- Fig. 16: Pattern for cut pastry
- Fig. 17: Principal production centres in Britain and Europe
- Fig. 18: Ligurian Archaic Graffita
- Fig. 19: Pisa bowl with sgraffito floral decoration. Rim diameter 228mm
- Fig. 20: Beauvais single sgraffito rosette bowl
- Fig. 21: Utrecht slipware stag dish
- Fig. 22 (a-b): Werra slipware, sgraffito dish dated 1619
- Fig. 23: Enkhuizen-Werra type slipware: sgraffito dish dated 1605.
- Fig. 24: North Devon sgraffito plate found at Sefton Old Hall, Merseyside
- Fig. 25: Donyatt cockerel dish
© Internet Archaeology
URL: http://intarch.ac.uk/journal/issue16/1/tof.html
Last updated: Wed Mar 24 2004