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Does Jizhou Kiln have fake black porcelain wood leaf pattern tea lamps? How to distinguish
Jizhou kiln wood leaf pattern black porcelain teacups are fake.

Jizhou kiln black porcelain wood leaf pattern tea lamp, also known as Jizhou kiln black glaze wood leaf pattern lamp, is a famous Chinese porcelain.

Distinguishing method:

For example, the pattern of konoha has been lost for a long time, and imitators don't know what to do. They just use leaves to mark the porcelain blank. After firing, the leaves are invisible, Ye Jin is sunken, the surface is smooth without layers, and the glass glaze is dazzling.

The truth is that the leaves are pasted on the porcelain blank after special treatment and turned into ashes in the glaze at high temperature, but the shape of the leaves remains unchanged, the ashes accumulate into a texture layer, the veins of the leaves are distinct, and the whole leaf is dull, even even flush with the black glaze when touched by hand.

It is said that it is very useful to paste Ye Jin on the old black glazed lamp now. The Ye Jin is convex, and you can know it by touching it. Moreover, genuine products are decorated with mulberry leaves, while imitations are decorated with maple leaves or other miscellaneous leaves.

Extended data:

1, the mystery of Konoha's life experience.

History shows that Jizhou Kiln began in the late Tang Dynasty, flourished in the Five Dynasties Northern Song Dynasty, flourished in the Southern Song Dynasty and declined in the late Yuan Dynasty, with a history of 1200 years.

Jizhou Kiln was the most creative folk kiln in Song and Yuan Dynasties. Its porcelain is a blend of Zen and Confucian culture, and absorbs many techniques. Its decoration is novel and unique, and its style is fresh and simple, which occupies a very important position in the history of China ceramics.

Among the porcelains in Jizhou Kiln, I'm afraid the one that impressed me the most is not the one belonging to Muyezhan.

Muyezhan is the best black glaze in Jizhou. Black glaze is applied inside and outside. Put a mulberry leaf in a lamp and send it to a kiln for firing. After the high temperature of 1300 degrees, this mulberry leaf not only did not disappear in the smoke, on the contrary, its beautiful lines, shapes and textures remained intact on the dark teacup forever.

Since the Song and Yuan Dynasties, Tianmu Wood has been exported to Japan, South Korea and Southeast Asian countries, enjoying a high reputation in the international market.

2. Development

Jizhou Kiln is one of the largest folk kilns in ancient China. Although there is no high-quality porcelain clay of Jizhou kiln, it can work hard on the variety and decoration of products and stand tall in the ceramic industry for hundreds of years with strong local characteristics and national style.

Jizhou kiln is rich in products, including blue glaze ware, printed white glaze ware, white glaze black and brown painted ware, blue glaze ware and black glaze ware. Decorative techniques are also varied, such as printing, flower picking, painting, paper-cut decals, plastic piling, wood leaf patterns and so on. Among them, black porcelain is the most famous

Jizhou Kiln Black Porcelain includes tiger skin spots, hawksbill, oil drops, partridge spots, paper-cut and wood leaves mentioned above.

China black porcelain is also called Tianmu in Japan. According to legend, during the Song and Yuan Dynasties, Japanese students studying in China brought back black glazed porcelain lamps built in Fujian from Tianmu Mountain in Zhejiang Province, hence the name Tianmu.

According to different patterns and colors, the Japanese divide black porcelain into oil sky, tortoise sky, konoha sky, pearlescent sky and so on. They also called the black porcelain burned in Japan Seto Tianmu and the black porcelain burned in North Korea Goryeo Tianmu.

Wood leaf pattern lamp embodies the unique style of Jizhou kiln. When making, a layer of black glaze is first applied to the tire, and then a layer of light glaze is applied to the specially treated leaves, and then the leaves are glued to the black porcelain blank, and then they become wood leaf patterns after firing.

There are half leaves and one leaf, and there are also two or three leaves superimposed. Some people think that the leaves used are mulberry leaves, while others think that they are bodhi leaves. The black glazed bowl processed in this way has a simple wild interest. This manufacturing technology has rarely been handed down, and the research on it did not begin until the 1980s.

The wooden leaf Tianmu lamp of Jizhou kiln collected by Tokyo National Museum in Japan has been listed as a national cultural relic and is only taken out for people to visit for a limited time.

In addition, in the British Museum, there is a Tianmu Muye lamp, which is called the "human artifact". It can be seen that this unique konoha lamp technology and its products have now been regarded as treasures.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Jizhou Kiln Black Glazed Woodleaf Lamp