Jun porcelain in Ming dynasty is rare, but its existence and excellent skills really set a banner for future generations, which makes people sit up and take notice.
Jun porcelain in Ming dynasty mainly concentrated in the middle and early Ming dynasty, and the porcelain varieties in this period can be said to be the best model of Ming porcelain when Xuande came, so there is a foundation for Jun porcelain to have good results in this period.
The glaze color of this period is purple mixed with blue, and the exposed tire at the bottom is dark brown, similar to the paste rice bottom in Chenghua period.
In addition to the above glaze colors, Mingjun porcelain also has sky blue dotted with purple spots. Its tire soil is gray, brown and black, very delicate. Modelling imitates Song Jun, including swallow-shaped bottle, jade pot spring bottle, high-legged plate, lotus leaf covered jar, lotus leaf big plate, drum washing nail, etc. The matrix is hard and heavy, mostly belonging to display porcelain. The glaze is smooth and bright. Its purple spots are as red as chicken blood and scattered with blue-purple veins. Glaze from the top of the foot wall to the bottom is also glazed, and the bottom glaze is mostly fuzzy beige, which is different from the occasional shrimp cyan in the Song Dynasty. The glaze is covered with tears. There are spiral lines and mastoid lines on the bottles and cans. One of the most distinctive places is that there are dense iron crystal flowers (or rust flowers) in the corners of the mouth. The naked eye looks like a small bright spot, but with a magnifying glass of 30 times, these iron crystal flowers show petals like silver flowers in full bloom. This obvious feature is unique among Jun porcelains in past dynasties, and it has also become an unrepeatable factor for later porcelains.
Mingjun also pays attention to purple mouth and iron feet, and his mouth is dark brown and purple; The fetal quality of the foot is dark. The difference is that the size of bubbles in Mingjun's glaze is smaller than that in Song Jun, and there are many bright bubbles, which are denser than that in Song Jun. The glaze layer is thinner and fresher than flat, with tiny pits and pits, belonging to orange peel. Its tire soil is more delicate than that of the Song Dynasty, and its weight is also the heaviest among Jun porcelain in previous dynasties.
Ming Dynasty Jun porcelain value: very high, with collection value.