Good news for anyone out there in cyber space who's a fan of fabulous Festin Coquin pottery. Boutique Provencale is running a competition with £100 of this gorgeous french tableware to be won. The winner will receive a voucher worth £50 to spend on Festin Coquin pottery on the website, and 2 runners-up will win vouchers for £25.
It's easy to enter...
1. Like our page on Facebook. Click here to go straight to our Facebook page
2. Answer the following question "What region of France does the website focus on?" Email your answer to info@boutiqueprovencale.co.uk
Once you've completed both steps you will then be entered into a free draw.The competition runs until the 30th April 2013. Winners will be notified on 1st May.
Potty About Pottery
Wednesday, 13 March 2013
Sunday, 4 November 2012
A History of Provencal Pottery
The Provence region has produced earthenware since the days of the
Romans. Pottery workshops, complete with kilns dating from the first
century AD have been excavated in La Butte de Carnes near Marseille.
Over the centuries, pottery continued to be made in individual
workshops, both for domestic use and for export through the
Mediterranean seaports. Then in the 19th century, factories began to
appear in answer to the ever-growing demand for thrown or moulded
cookware. But with the advent of new materials such as aluminium and
plastic, these factories eventually closed.
Nowadays most provençal pottery is primarily decorative and three basic types of pottery are produced. Terre rouge, the most robust, is made primarily from the red clay of the region and then glazed. Our products from Bleu d'Argile and Souleo fall into this category. Faience is made from the finest local clays and can be distinguished from plain pottery by its enamel porcelain-like finish. This is the style of pottery you can see in our Festin Coquin range. The third style of pottery is Gres, made out of clay from central France.
Provence abounds with workshops where skilled artisans continue the best traditions of pottery making, producing attractive, colourful designs by hand.
Click on this link to see our full range of pottery.
Nowadays most provençal pottery is primarily decorative and three basic types of pottery are produced. Terre rouge, the most robust, is made primarily from the red clay of the region and then glazed. Our products from Bleu d'Argile and Souleo fall into this category. Faience is made from the finest local clays and can be distinguished from plain pottery by its enamel porcelain-like finish. This is the style of pottery you can see in our Festin Coquin range. The third style of pottery is Gres, made out of clay from central France.
Provence abounds with workshops where skilled artisans continue the best traditions of pottery making, producing attractive, colourful designs by hand.
Click on this link to see our full range of pottery.
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