692 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1891. 



439. Painting, Dyeing, Staining, Vakxishing, Gilding, etc. — Continued. 



Varnishing, lacquering, japanning, polishing, preserving on wood and met- 

 als. Samples of lacquer. Inlaid lacquer, etc. 

 Gilding with gold leaf and water gilding. 

 Bleaching materials and processes. 

 Cleansing of soiled fabrics 

 Fabrics of all kinds, shown as results of dyeing or painting processes. 



44. Pottery and its Manufacture. The Ceramic Art. 



440. Historical Collection. 



Prehistoric pottery : Old World, New World. 



Pottery of uncivilized races: Asiatic, Australasian, African, South Ameri- 

 can, North American, 



Oriental Pottery : Egyptian, Phoenician and Judean, Assyrian and Babylo- 

 nian, Western Asiatic, Arabian and Maghreb, Persian, Hindoostanese, 

 Chinese, Corean, Japanese. 



European Pottery — Classical Period: Grecian, Etruscan, Roman and of the 

 Roman Colonies. 



European Pottery — Mediaeval Period: Hispano-Mores(ine, Italian, French, 

 German, English. 



European Pottery — Renaissance and Recent Period: Italian, French, Ger- 

 man, Swiss, Dutch and Belgian, English, Spanish and Portuguese, Scandi- 

 navian, Russian. 



South American Pottery : South American and Mexican. 



North American Pottery : United States. 



441. Soft Pottery. 



Unbaked bricks, adobe, etc, 



Terra-cotta, bricks, common and pressed, tiles, architectural forms, etc. 

 Tessarie from powdered clay. 

 Un glazed pottery. 

 Lustrous pottery. 



Glazed pottery (drain tiles, sewer pipes, etc.). 



Enameled pottery (including delft, majolica, enameled lava, etc. ). Enameled 

 tiles. 



442. Hard Pottery and its Manufactures. 



Fire bricks, crucibles and pots. 



Stone ware, hard pottery, iron stone china. Druggists' and chemical w.'ire. 



Floor tiles. Encaustic tiles. 



Brown ware, with salt glazing, cohired and uncolored bodies. 



Other articles of hard pottery. 



443. Porcelain and its Manufactures. 



Hard paste porcelain, including parian, statuary, porcelains, etc. Biscuit 

 ware. 



Soft paste porcelain, tender and with silicious l>odies, implements and proc- 

 esses. 



444. Materials of Manufacture. 



Clays (china, ball, sagger), kaolin, feldspar, etc., enameling and cohiring 

 materials. 



445. Lathes, Apparatus for Engine Turning, Stamps, etc. 



446. Processes and Implements of Painting, Printing, Glazing, Crackling, 



etc. 

 On bisque by hand. 

 On l>isque transferred. 

 On the glaze by hand. 

 On the glaze printed by forccj 



