Wonderful jacket. Your wit is appreciated. The ginger beer ceramic was my favorite. Love to go antique shopping with you sometime, as you discuss the pottery for sale.
Thank you Mr. Hemery for today’s video. A great explanation of the pottery history for many centuries. Good to see you again. All the best, Sir! 🇬🇧🙂👍🇺🇸
That was as brilliant as it was informative and entertaining! I would have lost money,if I had made a bet on what the letter ‘B’ would be. I suppose a Bartman would have been too obvious… My favorite was that otherwise unremarkable ginger beer,made mindblowingly profound by that one millionth commemoration mark! Please tell me you found that in the mud or bottle tip. Also,lastly,what do you know about color changing glazes? A newer innovation,I would think. I have a little crab that turns from brown to gold when I pour hot water on it!
Good to see you, Dr Hemery!, you're looking very natty in ar brass-buttoned coat. This was so fun, seeing some of your collection and learning, thank you!
Great to see this and Richard! I have a very old jug and plate, cream coloured with blue and white transfers on them, it's also very thick! No makers mark on either piece I bought them at auction in 1989, they were in a cardboard box full of stuff no-one else wanted, I paid a whole £1!! There was also two tiny, silver pots, Salts or mustard I'm never sure one was complete with a colbolt blue glass insert and the smallest spoon I've ever seen! Anyway, I digress! Sorry back to my pottery;! Could I send you a photo of them, I just know you're the one person that could tell me about them. I have a feeling the jug is tableware and not a water ewer used for morning ablutions! The plate is oval so I think it's a serving platter of some sort. I'd really like to put an age to it I think it could be either early Victorian or possibly end of the 18th century. I hope you'll be able to help me. I've struggled to find any info on them! Happy New Year to you and your family. Chez in Lliria Valencia Spain
If you want to follow me on Instagram, you can find me at thames_pottery.
Thank you Richard for this series. So informative and fun. Loved every day of it. Hope you do more. Happy New Year 🎊
Great to see you again. Love your book.
Thank you…wonderfully informative!!
Wonderful jacket. Your wit is appreciated. The ginger beer ceramic was my favorite.
Love to go antique shopping with you sometime, as you discuss the pottery for sale.
What a cool overview! Love how this was structured.
Excellent !!!
Lovely to be able to watch the whole Alphabet in one! Marital harmony is maintained. 😂
Great to see a new video from you Richard! This was fantastic.
Thank you Mr. Hemery for today’s video. A great explanation of the pottery history for many centuries. Good to see you again. All the best, Sir! 🇬🇧🙂👍🇺🇸
Thank you!
Really interesting& entertaining. Thank you , look forward to more from you soon
Brilliant, I really enjoyed this. Thank you.
P.s I like your jacket ❤
thank you!
Great educational course on pottery thank you
Thanks!
Welcome back, Professor.
Thank you, Tobias!
Is there anything that you don’t know about pottery?!!! Glad to see you back.x
Plenty, thank you.
That was as brilliant as it was informative and entertaining!
I would have lost money,if I had made a bet on what the letter ‘B’ would be.
I suppose a Bartman would have been too obvious…
My favorite was that otherwise unremarkable ginger beer,made mindblowingly profound by that one millionth commemoration mark!
Please tell me you found that in the mud or bottle tip.
Also,lastly,what do you know about color changing glazes?
A newer innovation,I would think.
I have a little crab that turns from brown to gold when I pour hot water on it!
Thank you!
I’m thrilled to see you. Many thanks
Keep up your good work... we need to see more to learn more...PLEASE keep showing your knowledge ...
thank you!
Miss seeing you, Richard. Loved the video.
Fun episode!
I wonder if engine turning could be mistaken for clay pigeon shards/sherds? Wonderful video😊
Yes, and Roman sherds as well, same colour!
Good to see you, Dr Hemery!, you're looking very natty in ar brass-buttoned coat. This was so fun, seeing some of your collection and learning, thank you!
thank you!
The G is for great video and the T is for thank you! And maybe the H is for horizontal filming the next time?
Yes, originally this was filmed for Instagram so the mobile phone format was best.
Great to see this and Richard! I have a very old jug and plate, cream coloured with blue and white transfers on them, it's also very thick! No makers mark on either piece I bought them at auction in 1989, they were in a cardboard box full of stuff no-one else wanted, I paid a whole £1!! There was also two tiny, silver pots, Salts or mustard I'm never sure one was complete with a colbolt blue glass insert and the smallest spoon I've ever seen! Anyway, I digress! Sorry back to my pottery;! Could I send you a photo of them, I just know you're the one person that could tell me about them. I have a feeling the jug is tableware and not a water ewer used for morning ablutions! The plate is oval so I think it's a serving platter of some sort. I'd really like to put an age to it I think it could be either early Victorian or possibly end of the 18th century. I hope you'll be able to help me. I've struggled to find any info on them! Happy New Year to you and your family. Chez in Lliria Valencia Spain
Yes, of course, send me some photos at richardhemery@tiscali.co.uk
Richard very kindly looked at some sherds I had, he was very helpful
Do you ID pottery? I have a piece that even stumped Antiques Roadshow. It looks European and very old.
I'm happy to have a look. Message me on richardhemery@tiscali.co.uk or on Instagram thames_pottery
❤🇺🇦👍
🎊 "promo sm"