Decor 134
134
HB faience is created by inglaze painting. After the first firing, a white covering glaze is applied to the ceramics. After drying, our ceramic painters, some of whom were trained by Hedwig Bollhagen, hand-paint their famous colored faience decorations into the glaze. In the so-called smooth firing, the glaze combines with the decor painted with engobe and fixes it. The ceramic "safe" colors form the classics with blue, yellow and black. Red is considered a "volatile color" and often fades in the smooth firing. All colors belong to Hedwig Bollhagen's typical faience decors, which are to be understood as a homage to the farmer's pottery that she so admired.
Plate HB 502
The bread plate by Hedwig Bollhagen with the shape number "502" corresponds in its simple, timeless form to the Bauhaus maxim: Beautiful is what wo...
View full detailsPlate HB 501
The bread plate from Hedwig Bollhagen with the shape number "501" not only impresses with its no-frills shape. Weighing 270 grams and two centimete...
View full detailsCup HB 573
The two-piece cappuccino cup by Hedwig Bollhagen with the shape number "573" consists of cup and saucer. The thick-walled ceramic cup perfectly ins...
View full detailsCup HB 501
The tea cup from Hedwig Bollhagen with the shape number "501" delights with its classic, nostalgic design and a design that is rooted in tradition....
View full detailsSoup plate HB 223
The deep plate by Hedwig Bollhagen with the shape number "223" not only impresses visually with flowing contours and a clear shape, in which tradit...
View full detailsPlate HB 1065
The dessert plate from Hedwig Bollhagen with the shape number "1065" not only impresses with its simple and clear shape. The plate, which weighs 17...
View full detailsBowl HB 525
The bowl with the shape number "525" corresponds in its simple, straightforward form to the Bauhaus maxim of Hedwig Bollhagen: Beautiful is what wo...
View full detailsBowl HB 503A
Bowl HB 1065A
The sugar bowl by Hedwig Bollhagen with the shape number "1065A" exudes more than a touch of nostalgia. Even great-grandmother could once have set ...
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