Dervish Blue Blanc Bianca Tea Glass and Saucer
Regular price
£12.99
Sale
1 piece of BPA Free Glass and 1 piece of Bone China Saucer
Capacity : 165cc
Top to Bottom Height : 10cm
Side to Side Width : 13cm
Weight : 240 gram
We recommend hand wash with a soft soap for hand painted decorations.
The Dervish Glass is meant to open up moments of pleasure, a design for hosting and celebrating with enormous rewards. With a wide base and elegant top, the Dervish Glass is a new design by Faruk Malhan, especially for tea connoisseurs to enliven their pleasures of tea. The tea is amply brewed, appearing fresh and bright in a transparent tulip-shaped glass, never filled to the brim.
We recommend hand wash with a soft soap due to the delicacy of hand paint on the decorations.
Bone china is a type of porcelain that is composed of bone ash. It has been defined as "ware with a translucent body", where Bone china is the strongest of the porcelain or china ceramics, having very high mechanical and physical strength and chip resistance, and is known for its high levels of whiteness and translucency. Its high strength allows it to be produced in thinner cross-sections than other types of porcelain.
In the mid-18th century, English potters had not succeeded in making hard-paste porcelain (as made in East Asia and Meissen porcelain) but found bone ash a useful addition to their soft-paste porcelain mixtures, giving strength. This became standard at the Bow porcelain factory in London (operating from around 1747), and spread to some other English factories.
The modern product was developed by the Staffordshire potter Josiah Spode in the early 1790s. Spode included kaolin, so his formula, sometimes called "Staffordshire bone-porcelain", was effectively hard-paste, but stronger, and versions were adopted by all the major English factories by around 1815.
From its initial development and up to the latter part of the 20th century, bone china was almost exclusively an English product, with production being effectively localised in Stoke-on-Trent.
Most major English firms made or still make it, including Fortnum & Mason, Mintons, Coalport, Spode, Royal Crown Derby, Royal Doulton, Wedgwood and Worcester.
In the UK, references to "china" or "porcelain" can refer to bone china, and "English porcelain" has been used as a term for it, both in the UK and around the world.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_china
KROSNO was founded in 1923 on the principal of quality and refined beauty. These principles are still at the heart of our business, enabling us to create exquisite glassware with superior transparency.
Understandably, over the years, new technology and changing trends have seen our brand evolve. This has facilitated the development of new product categories and innovative designs. KROSNO continues to develop both machine and manual production departments, making improvements to our collection wherever possible. We believe that even perfection should be challenged.
This agility and commitment to improvement has seen KROSNO become a truly international brand, now being sold in 60 countries.
KROSNO is distributed exclusively by H.A.G Imports, whose brands include Maxwell & Williams, Casa Domani and Cristal d’Arques Paris.