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porcelain A white highly vitrified clay body that is translucent where thin (often fired up to 1350oC, 2462 o F). The translucency is a result of silica glass fused into the fired clay. To achieve this a high amount of flux is added to a kaolin based clay body. The flux to clay ratio is often flux > clay, indeed some of the original Chinese porcelains had as little as 20% clay like minerals. The low clay content makes porcelain very difficult to throw and trimming wares is almost unavoidable. ...
Ãâó: www.turnerpottery.com/glossary_of_ceramic_terms.ht...
porcelain a fine, hard china, baked at a very high temperature.
Ãâó: www.imh.org/imh/china/ed/glos.html
porcelain A hard, translucent white ceramic made from china clay (kaolin) and chinastone (petuntse) and, in England, bone ash that is fired at high temperature.
Ãâó: www.caroadshow.org/glossary.htm
porcelain a hard, high-fired, fine-grained clay body which is glassy-white and sometimes translucent.
Ãâó: www.crt.state.la.us/art/terms.html
porcelain a hard, translucent, clayware body that differs very slightly from china in ingredients and manufacturing process. In most respects the two are so much alike that the term may be used interchangeably.
Ãâó: www.myspecialchina.com/gen/definitions.htm
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