Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 November 2011
The method of manufacture and application of plaques is discussed, also the use and length of life of moulds, in modern ceramic factories; together with the results of experiments in laboratories on the colour and content of clay slips. In Parts I and II respectively are described and illustrated thirty plaques and twelve moulded beakers.
The (lost) Oundle Form 64 by LIBERTVS in red samian is discussed; and there are further comments on the black ‘cup’ from Colchester mentioned in the 1957 paper.
page 42 note 1 Simpson, Grace, ‘Metallic Black Slip Vases from Central Gaul with Applied and Moulded decoration’, Antiq. Journ. xxxvii (1957), 29–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 42 note 2 By the kindness of the Directors of Messrs. Josiah Wedgwood & Sons Ltd. My grateful thanks are also due to Ivor Newcomb, Esq., for arranging this and other visits to pottery factories in Staffordshire.
page 43 note 1 My thanks are due to Dr. Th. A. H. M. Dobbelmann, Director of the Technical Department, De Kon Delft Aardewerkfabriek N. V. ‘Porceleyne Fles’, Delft, Holland; and to Dr. J. H. C. Kern, Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden.
page 43 note 2 G. B. Duncan, Esq., of Wedgwood & Co. Ltd., Tunstall, discussed their methods of manufacture, for which I express my gratitude.
page 43 note 3 Especially A. W. G. Kingsbury, Esq., University Museum, Oxford, and Dr. C. S. Exley, University of Keele.
page 43 note 4 A. Winter, ‘Die Technik des griechischen Töpfers in ihren Grundlagen’, Technische Beiträge zur Archäologie 1959, 1–45; Hofmann, U., ‘Die chemischen Grundlagen der griechischen Vasenmalerei’, Angewandte Chemie, lxxiv (1962), 397— 406.Google Scholar
page 43 note 5 Vertet, H., R.C.R.F.Acta, xiii (1971), 92–111Google Scholar, pls. 1, 2, 4–7.
page 44 note 1 Examined by the kind permission of Professor M. Labrousse.
page 44 note 2 Johns, Catherine, The British Museum Quarterly, xxxiv, 58–63Google Scholar.
page 44 note 3 Stanfield and Simpson, 1958, pl. 52, no. 608. A Form 64 stamped OF LIBERTI, not located by Stanfield, and attributed by Simpson to Charnay.
page 44 note 4 Smith, C. R., Collectanea Antiqua, iv (1857), 63Google Scholar, pl. 17; and Haverfield, F., V.C.H. Northants. i (1902), 219, fig. 35.Google Scholar
page 44 note 5 Déchelette, i, 284, no. 65, from Oundle.
page 44 note 6 Archaeologia, xix (1821), 409Google Scholar, pl. xlii. The illustration comes from a fuller account by John Bowtell, MS. Notebook 2, p. 171, in Downing College Library, Cambridge.
page 44 note 7 Cotton, M. A. and Wheeler, R. E. M., ‘Verulamium, 1949’, Trans. St. Albans Architectural and Archaeol. Soc. 1953, p. 80, fig. 7, no. 21.Google Scholar