![]() You can arrange vintage cabbage ware on your dresser, employ a chipped 1950s Spode jug as a loo brush holder, and keep a creamware seashell by the front door as a receptacle for keys. You can buy an entire 18th century Wedgwood dinner service – and eat from it – or a single lustreware mug and look at it. There’s also no end of possibility when it comes to use. Not only is it ubiquitous - there are more antique objects made of earthenware, stoneware or porcelain than any other material in the world – but there is a huge variety to the prices, ranging from free (what you find in the attic) to affordable (markets, junk shops, some antiques shops and decorative fairs) to eye-watering (other antiques shops and fairs, major auction houses). ![]() There’s an element of equal opportunity to collecting vintage and antique pottery.
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