It’s #WorldParrotDay 🦜!
Vessel in the form of a parrot
Comala style, Colima, W. Mexico
Late Formative Period, 300 BCE - 400 CE
Ceramic w/ red slip
18.5 × 30.5 × 14 cm (7 5/16 × 12 × 5 1/2 in.)
On display @ Princeton University Art Museum (2016-1239)

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from China
seen from China

seen from France

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from France
seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy
seen from Italy
It’s #WorldParrotDay 🦜!
Vessel in the form of a parrot
Comala style, Colima, W. Mexico
Late Formative Period, 300 BCE - 400 CE
Ceramic w/ red slip
18.5 × 30.5 × 14 cm (7 5/16 × 12 × 5 1/2 in.)
On display @ Princeton University Art Museum (2016-1239)
February 19, 2025:
Pumpkin Primary, Gaoler, Glimmer.
Sirius of REDWARE's clan!
Black cow redware sugar bowl made in Japan
The most recent Psychic Damage. Drew this for a horror issue of a zine named GOOL! Psychic Damage follows seven main characters, the pitiful Lauren being one of them. Her stories will often revolve being a hopeless romantic. Excited to show more!
a sketch of me, my partner’s, and @dykeforce‘s fursonas that i drew around halloween and never finished!
Follow me at https://blog2collectionsanfavs.tumblr.com/
Built-in shelves, china cupboards, and niches are perfect places for displaying fragile items or all-of-one-kind country collections. Here, shelves are placed in and around a window that’s been fitted with translucent glass. The glass panel filters light and effectively silhouettes a collection of redware and American Indian art. The collection continues with several items of folk art and additional examples of redware placed on a New England birch drop-leaf table.
Better Homes and Gardens - Living the Country Life, 1985
One almost complete redware preserve jar was recovered during the 2006 excavation of an early 1830s into the 1840s privy in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. It was found in several pieces but was reconstructed to form a vessel about 8½ inches tall, with a rolled lip. The vessel tapers in near the rim and is 3 ¼ inches in diameter at the rim and 4½ inches at the base. It has a dark, rust-colored glaze with some burn marks on the side. The vessel is unusual in that the bottom of the exterior does not have glazing on it, but the interior does.