Ceramics Books and Magazines

International Publications about Ceramic Research, Industry, Products, and Art

Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Ceramics Books » Pottery & Ceramics » Weller Pottery (Schiffer Book for Collectors)  
Main Categories
Ceramics Books
Ceramics Magazines
Popular Topics
 Ceramics
 Ceramic Kilns
 Ceramics Pottery
 Ceramics Clay
 Fiber Glass
 Paint Ceramics
 Bisque Ceramics
 Ceramics Hopper
 Heat Ceramics
 Thermal Ceramics
 Ceramics Machining
 Ceramics Complexity
 History of Ceramics
 Ceramics Essential Guide
 Industrial Ceramics
 Carbo Ceramics
 Advanced Ceramics
 Antique Ceramics
 Ceramics Supply
 Ceramics Art
 Contemporary Ceramics
 Architectural Ceramics
 Picasso Ceramics
 Ceramic Tiles
 Ceramic Raw Materials
 Ceramics Coating
 Ceramics Production
 Electrical Ceramics
 Stoneware, Pottery
 Ceramics Dinnerware
 Ceramics Equipment
 Ceramics Research
 Biomedical Ceramics
 Ceramic Fiber
 Sanitary Ceramics
 Duncan Ceramics
 Ceramics Grinding
 Ceramics Restoration
 Technical Ceramics
 Ceramics Testing
 Ceramics Processing
 Ceramics Handling
 Ceramics Designing
 Ancient Ceramics
 Electric Kiln Ceramics
 Wheel Thrown Ceramics
Popular Ceramics Books
 Handbook of Ceramics Grinding and Polishing
 Illustrated Dictionary of Ceramics
 Dictionary of Enamelling
 Illustrated Dictionary of Practical Pottery
 Dictionary of Glass Making in 3 languages
 The Kiln Book
 The Big Book of Ceramics
 New Dictionary of Marks: Pottery &Porcelain 1850 to Present
 The Encyclopedia of Pottery Techniques
 The Encyclopedia of Art Techniques
") winpops.document.close(); } //-->
Weller Pottery (Schiffer Book for Collectors)
Weller Pottery (Schiffer Book for Collectors)

 enlarge 
Author: Jeffrey B. Snyder
Publisher: Schiffer Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $49.95
Buy New: $29.00
You Save: $20.95 (42%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 756128

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 240
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.8
Dimensions (in): 11.1 x 8.4 x 1.1

ISBN: 0764321862
Dewey Decimal Number: 738.37
EAN: 9780764321863

Publication Date: January 5, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: New hardcover copy w/DJ. Small tear on top of DJ. Will cover w/ clear plastic. BD1777/1

Similar Items:

  • Warman's Weller Pottery: Identification and Price Guide (Warmans)
  • Collector's Encyclopedia of Weller Pottery
  • Hallmark Keepsake Ornaments: Warman's Companion (Warmans Companion)
  • Collectors Encyclopedia of Roseville Pottery (Collector's Encyclopedia of Roseville Pottery)
  • The Collector's Ultimate Encyclopedia Of Hull Pottery: Identification and Values (Collector Ultimate Encyclopedia)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
One of the early twentieth century's most prolific potteries, the S.A. Weller Pottery Company, of Zanesville, Ohio, produced art pottery and artwares reflecting the major art movements of the day, including Arts and Crafts, Art Nouveau, and Art Deco. Here, over 520 striking color images display the broad array of wares produced by Weller from 1895 to 1948, including such well-known lines as Art Nouveau, Aurelian, Coppertone, Dickens Ware, Eocean, Forest, Hudson, Louwelsa, Sicard, and Woodcraft. This sweeping survey includes a sampling of hand decorations by many of the company's respected artists and also illustrates the highly varied, innovative glaze treatments employed over the years on a wide range of decorative items. The carefully researched text includes a history of the firm, a fascinating review of how changing art movements and public demands influenced the pottery, a detailed bibliography, helpful listing of all known Weller line names, and complete index. Values for the wares displayed are found in the captions. An essential reference for Weller enthusiasts and all who are passionate about ceramics!


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Introducing Rosesville Pottery   October 12, 2007
What a good educational book. Anything you would won't to know about Rosesville pottery its there.


3 out of 5 stars Great Coffee Table Book   April 10, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

EXCELLENT color photos of the pieces listed make this a visually beautiful book. Set up in three sections as Weller's early, middle, and late periods, with pottery lines listed alphabetically within each section. Years produced and history are peppered throughout sections. Easy to get around if you are familiar with Weller. Index lists patterns and major shapes, but could do better listing by animal name, etc. The reason I rated it as only average is that only a few pieces of each pattern are listed, and are not always listed together if they cross the time sections used. Going through ebay, I'm lucky to find one out of ten pieces to try to price. If you are hoping to use this as a pricing guide it is missing too many pieces. The prices that are listed seem to be pretty close, though. Overall a very pretty and informative book as long as you're not looking for a comprehensive pricing guide.


4 out of 5 stars WELLER POTTERY TIME LINE   December 18, 2005
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

Weller Pottery
1872-1948
Fultonham & Zanesville Ohio

Weller Timeline

April 12, 1851 Samuel Augustus Weller born in Ohio
1872 Operates a one-man pottery in Fultonham, near Zanesville in Muskeegum County, Ohio
1882-1890 Expansion to Zanesville, followed by building, buy-outs until 1931 when the Depression forces consolidation and down-sizing
1893-1896 William Long's Lonhuda ware, Louise Weller and Louwelsa born, 1896
1897 Henry Schmidt develops Weller Turada, the first squeezebag pottery line in the Ohio valley, Owens Pottery introduces similar Cyrano line in 1898
1895-1904 Charles Upjohn heads Weller decorating department, develops Dickensware II in 1900
1902-1907 Jacques Sicard at Weller, Sicard line appears in the fall of 1903; (Clement Massier Reflets Metalliques by 1889)
1902-1905 Weller becomes world's largest pottery and maker of mass produced Art Pottery
1903-1904 Frederick Hurton Rhead at Weller, develops Jap Birdimal line in 1904, becomes Roseville's first art director in 1904, leaves Roseville in 1908
1904 Weller has huge display at the St. Louis Exposition
1908 Rudolph Lorber develops Dechiwo, 1908, which leads to Burntwood, Claywood, and others
1917 Weller Hudson family introduced
1916-1929 Rudolph Lorbor develops Brighton birds, Muskota, Woodcraft, Forest, Glendale and other great naturalistic lines, ending with Coppertone, 1929. Dorothy England Laughead creates Silvertone, Chase, and the Garden Animals
1920-1924 John Lessell heads the decorating department, develops luster glaze lines including LaSa, Marengo, Cloudburst, Lamar, others
July 1, 1922 Weller Pottery incorporated as "S.A. Weller, Inc."
October 4, 1925 Samuel Augustus Weller dies
1925-1932 Nephew Harry Weller takes over as president, introduces continuous kiln, consolidates plants in 1931 due to Depression, dies in auto crash in 1932
1930-1932 Last freehand decorated lines introduced at Weller: Stellar, Geode, Cretone, Raceme, Bonito
1932-1937 Frederic Grant, son-in-law, is president for one year, divorced from Ethel (Weller, b. 1898); Irvin Smith, another son-in-law (Louise) is president from 1933-1937
1935 Freehand decoration ends at Weller
1935-1948 Weller produces simplified embossed lines
1937-1948 Walter Hughes, a ceramic engineer and former employee at American Encaustic Tiling Company is Weller's last president
1947-1948 Essex Wire Corporation buys controlling share in Weller, closes the pottery in 1948
1954 Minnie Weller dies at age 92, Weller house contents are auctioned

ALSO STRONGLY RECOMMEND COLLECTOR'S ENCYLOPEDIA OF WELLER POTTERY FOR GREAT PICTURES AND HISTORY.





5 out of 5 stars Get This Book!   June 2, 2005
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

I went looking for a Weller Pottery book and this is the 1st one I found. I am so very happy! The pictures are very beautiful and clear. The history section is very detailed. This book is a must have for any pottery collector!


Copyright by CeramicsBookshop.com Cart powered by Amazon.com
All logos and trademarks on this site are property of their respective owners.
Industrial Ceramics and Pottery : Ceramics Books and Magazines


Add Your Ceramics Company

Additional Resources
 Ceramics Directory

 Ceramics Links

 Sitemap
Ceramics by Region
 Chinese Ceramics
 Japanese Ceramics
 German Ceramics
 French Ceramics
 Italian Ceramics
 Australian Ceramics
 Scandinavian Ceramics
 American Ceramics
 Indian Ceramics
 UK's Ceramics
 Spanish Ceramics
 Mexican Ceramics
 Florence Ceramics
Popular Ceramics Magazines
 Ceramics
 Ceramics Monthly
 Ceramic Art and Perception
 Ceramic Review
 Fired Arts and Crafts
 Ceramics Technical
 World Ceramics and Refractories
 Ceramics in America
 Journal of American Ceramic Society
 Journal of European Ceramic Society
 Asian Ceramics Magazine
 Ca Select: Ceramic Materials
 Ceramics International
 Ceramics Industry
 Interceram
 Industrial Ceramics
 Applied Ceramic Technology
 Australian Ceramics
 Indian Ceramics
 Seramikkusu= Japan Ceramics
 Victorian Ceramic Group
 Ceramic Industry Data
 Ceramic Projects
 National Ceramics Quarterly
 Ceramic Art
 Ceramic Forum Int
 Ceramic World Review
 International Ceramics Journal
 Oriental Ceramics Society
 Ceramics Ireland Mag
 Victorian Ceramic Group
 C+Ca Industrial Ceramics
 Australasian Ceramic Society
 Northern Ceramic Society
 Ceramics= Silikaty