Please check out Hexadecimal Chart to see what codes are available to name. The hexadecimal code that matches this color is FFE4C4
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| - Please check out Hexadecimal Chart to see what codes are available to name. The hexadecimal code that matches this color is FFE4C4
- Bisque porcelain is unglazed, white ceramic ware. Examples include bisque dolls. A related term is biscuit. This has been defined as "pottery that has been fired but not yet glazed. Biscuit earthenware is porous and readily absorbs water; vitreous ware and bone china are almost non-porous even in the biscuit state." The temperature of biscuit firing is usually at least 1000°C, although higher temperature are common. The firing of the ware that results in the biscuit article causes permanent chemical and physical changes to occur. These result in a much harder and more resilient article which can still be porous, and this can ease the application of glazes.
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| - either a kind of pottery or a kind of soup. Both the pottery and the soup are similar in color. Bisque pottery is pottery that is fired but not glazed and is therefore white with a creamy tone. Bisque soup is made from seafood that is thickened into a light creamy tone.
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| - Please check out Hexadecimal Chart to see what codes are available to name. The hexadecimal code that matches this color is FFE4C4
- Bisque porcelain is unglazed, white ceramic ware. Examples include bisque dolls. A related term is biscuit. This has been defined as "pottery that has been fired but not yet glazed. Biscuit earthenware is porous and readily absorbs water; vitreous ware and bone china are almost non-porous even in the biscuit state." The temperature of biscuit firing is usually at least 1000°C, although higher temperature are common. The firing of the ware that results in the biscuit article causes permanent chemical and physical changes to occur. These result in a much harder and more resilient article which can still be porous, and this can ease the application of glazes. Whilst biscuit is the more widely used term for this intermediary stage in the production of twice-fired pottery confusingly American studio potters tend to use bisque. A similar confused use with pottery terminology is flint rather than silica or quartz.
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