Global Information Lookup Global Information

Osier pattern information


Two "osier pattern" dishes of the first "Sulkowski" type, Meissen, 1755–60
Frankenthal porcelain imitation of the "old osier" pattern, with minimal vertical bands
A version of the third type "New Osier", known as "Brandenstein-Relief". Modern plate.

In tableware the Osier pattern is a moulded basket-weave pattern in delicate relief used round the borders of porcelain plates and other pieces of flatware. It originated in Germany in the 1730s on Meissen porcelain, and was later often imitated by other producers. It is presumed to have been devised by Johann Joachim Kaendler, the celebrated head modeller at Meissen.[1] The name comes from Salix viminalis, or the common osier (ozier in German), a Eurasian species of willow, whose thin, flexible, shoots or withies were and are much used for various types of wickerwork, usually encouraged by coppicing the plants.[2]

Such relief backgrounds were a speciality of Meissen under Kändler, as in the "Dulong border" (from 1743) with a rather neoclassical plant-scroll pattern,[3] and, most spectacular of all, the decoration of the famous Swan Service, where each plate or other piece of flatware has a delicate background with radiating bands based on a scallop shell, against which there is in the central well a pair of swans on the water amid bullrushes, and a crane in the air, descending to join another on the left. The standing crane grasps a fish in his beak, and the head of another fish can be seen in the water beneath the swan on the right.[4]

In fact Meissen used three versions of the osier borders, with several minor variations between different moulds. The first type, produced from about 1732, and widely used in a dinner service for Count Alexander Joseph Sulkowski of about 1735, is called the "ordinar ozier" ("ordinary osier") or Sulkowski type. It has small groups of shoots diagonal to the edge of the plate, forming squares with the adjacent groups at right angles. These are all set between straight vertical bands at regular intervals. The inner and outer boundaries of the osier decoration may be marked by striated bands, also imitating woven basketwork.[5]

Not long after, a version was introduced with finer shoots, all going in the same direction parallel with the edge of the plate, and not always having the vertical strips, which as before are straight. After the final version was introduced in 1742, this second one was known as the "Altozier" or "old ozier", and the third one as the "Neuozier" or "new osier". The Neuozier pattern was a "more rococo version with spiral ribs".[6] In this type the vertical strips or ribs curve into a sort of "S" shape, are given more emphasis, and often come into the central well of the plate, projecting beyond the basket-weave, which may cover only about half of the raised border of the plate. The inner boundary of the decoration is marked by a raised ridge.[7] Both old and new types continued to be produced, up to the present day. The central well of the plate is left plain, except in the new type, and many larger pieces that are not flat (cups, pots and tureens for example) lack the relief pattern.

  1. ^ Wrightsman, 124; Coutts, 95
  2. ^ Wrightsman, 124
  3. ^ Wrightsman, 135–136
  4. ^ Ostrowski, 343–345
  5. ^ Wrightsman, 122–124; Coutts, 95
  6. ^ Wrightsman, 135
  7. ^ Coutts, 95 has a diagram from a catalogue showing the three types.

and 22 Related for: Osier pattern information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8805 seconds.)

Osier pattern

Last Update:

In tableware the Osier pattern is a moulded basket-weave pattern in delicate relief used round the borders of porcelain plates and other pieces of flatware...

Word Count : 651

Meissen porcelain

Last Update:

the 1745 "New Cutout" pattern, characterized by a wavy edge cut, and is presumed to have designed the much-copied osier pattern of a relief border imitating...

Word Count : 3856

Swan Service

Last Update:

geometrical, as in the "osier" patterns, imitating wickerwork, or the "Dulong border" (from 1743) with a rather neoclassical plant-scroll pattern. Large pieces...

Word Count : 1182

Branch

Last Update:

underbranches. Some branches from specific trees have their own names, such as osiers and withes or withies, which come from willows. Often trees have certain...

Word Count : 582

Alcohol tolerance

Last Update:

Alcohol and Alcoholism (Oxford, Oxfordshire). 21 (1): 93–104. PMID 2937417. Osier, Michael V.; Pakstis, Andrew J.; Soodyall, Himla; Comas, David; Goldman...

Word Count : 1617

Cornus

Last Update:

Canada. Cornus sanguinea (common dogwood). Europe. Cornus sericea (red osier dogwood). Northern and western North America, except Arctic regions. Cornus...

Word Count : 3035

Leaf

Last Update:

Turn Red in Autumn. The Role of Anthocyanins in Senescing Leaves of Red-Osier Dogwood". Plant Physiology. 127 (2): 566–574. doi:10.1104/pp.010063. PMC 125091...

Word Count : 11767

Wicker

Last Update:

Rushwork and wickerwork are terms used in England. A typical braiding pattern is called Wiener Geflecht, Viennese Braiding, as it was invented in 18th...

Word Count : 1147

Basket weaving

Last Update:

will bend and form a shape. Examples include pine, straw, willow (esp. osier), oak, wisteria, forsythia, vines, stems, fur, hide, grasses, thread, and...

Word Count : 3264

Hoop skirt

Last Update:

channels designed to act as casings for stiffening materials, such as rope, osiers, whalebone, steel, or, from the mid-20th century, nylon. The crinoline of...

Word Count : 626

Down in the Willow Garden

Last Update:

name varies but tends towards the pattern "Patrick McR...". One early version referred to an "Hozier tree;" Osier is a type of willow tree. The lyrics...

Word Count : 1800

Coppicing

Last Update:

wicker-work are grown in coppices of various willow species, principally osier. In France, sweet chestnut trees are coppiced for use as canes and bâtons...

Word Count : 2533

Yampa River

Last Update:

riparian forest type consisting of narrowleaf cottonwood, box elder and red-osier dogwood that was once more common in the Upper Colorado River Basin. The...

Word Count : 1526

Magor Marsh

Last Update:

reen grow water horsetail, reedmace, marsh marigold and azure damselfly. Osier, crack willow and sallow are typical tree species in the wet woodland. Magor...

Word Count : 513

Abenaki

Last Update:

calls and other utilitarian pieces, and the bark of Cornus sericea (red osier dogwood) ssp. sericea for smoking. They also use Acer rubrum, Acornus calamus...

Word Count : 5753

Samuel Colt

Last Update:

Potsdam. In an effort to end the flooding from the river he planted German osiers, a type of willow tree, in a 2-mile-long dike. He subsequently built a factory...

Word Count : 7517

Lithuanian grammar

Last Update:

accentuation pattern; one word, šuõ – dog, is of the fourth and has sg. inst. -imì. One word, or maybe even some more, is of the first accentuation pattern, rė́muo...

Word Count : 11823

Tree shaping methods

Last Update:

ash, sycamore, hazel, sessile omarkak, red oak, crab apple and the common osier willow used for basketwork. Experimentation has shown that, surprisingly...

Word Count : 3251

Farthingale

Last Update:

grass; later designs in the temperate climate zone were stiffened with osiers (willow withies), rope, or (from about 1580) whalebone. The name verdugado...

Word Count : 2948

Race and health

Last Update:

1126/science.1105436. PMID 15718463. S2CID 27107073. Mulligan CJ, Robin RW, Osier MV, Sambuughin N, Goldfarb LG, Kittles RA, et al. (September 2003). "Allelic...

Word Count : 10829

ADH1C

Last Update:

Science. 10 (4): 697–706. doi:10.1110/ps.45001. PMC 2373965. PMID 11274460. Osier MV, Pakstis AJ, Goldman D, Edenberg HJ, Kidd JR, Kidd KK (Dec 2002). "A...

Word Count : 950

Bambooworking

Last Update:

will bend and form a shape. Examples include pine, straw, willow (esp. osier), oak, wisteria, forsythia, vines, stems, fur, hide, grasses, thread, and...

Word Count : 3725

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net