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| - The same as shape. The form of a vase means its outline or external appearance. Wedgwood excelled in form, and following the ancient potters, he made great use of the ellipsis in his outlines. His forms in useful pottery — witness his cream-cups, his mustard-pots, his salt-cellars, his firuit-baskets, and countless other objects — are simply perfect. They often show much originality of conception. Many such pieces were in the first instance shaped out or formed by himsel£ He made great use of the oviform or egg-shape, as well as the ellipsis.
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| dcterms:subject
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| dbkwik:resource/FdADWVJbob5nQL-zg-YAbg==
| - Pottery and porcelain: Índice adicional
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| dbkwik:ceramica/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
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| Wikipedia
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| dbkwik:resource/OBtXi1I3QTwFx1jP-BQGHg==
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| abstract
| - The same as shape. The form of a vase means its outline or external appearance. Wedgwood excelled in form, and following the ancient potters, he made great use of the ellipsis in his outlines. His forms in useful pottery — witness his cream-cups, his mustard-pots, his salt-cellars, his firuit-baskets, and countless other objects — are simply perfect. They often show much originality of conception. Many such pieces were in the first instance shaped out or formed by himsel£ He made great use of the oviform or egg-shape, as well as the ellipsis.
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