KERAMIC STUDIO 
m 
SALT AND PEPPER 
Leah H. Rodman 
SCHEME — Tulip and stems blue enamel, leaves gold, or 
black part of design violet enamel, gray part in brown 
green. 
EXHIBITION NOTES 
Our editor, Mrs. A. Alsop-Robineau, is exhibiting at the 
Macbeth Galleries, 450 Fifth Avenue, New York, some of her 
high fire porcelains. This is part of the exhibit which received 
the Grand Prize of Ceramics at the Panama Pacific Exposition, 
and also includes some more recent pieces. Another interesting 
lot of her porcelains is shown in the Syracuse Museum of Fine 
Arts, where it will probably permanently remain. 
Mrs. Katherine E. Cherry exhibited a most interesting 
group of enamels at the Arts and Crafts Shop, Boston, this 
past week. It was a small collection but choice. Her de- 
signs are characterized by a certain fluent grace that attracts 
even the casual observer and holds the trained eye to careful 
inspection. Her colors are, in the main, soft and well-modu- 
lated, green-grays and grey- whites being employed in most 
pleasing harmony in several pieces. Mrs. Cherry has applied 
gold with a miser's hand, for which one is thankful in the present 
instance. Her coloring in this exhibit, in twilight and early 
morning nuances, requires no oriental touch of metal to achieve 
its purpose. One remembers a serving-tray in bird motif, 
a fancy-biscuit jar in well-modelled enamels, and three bowls 
most charming. If there is any fault to find it is with a slightly 
hurried execution in the bands of flat color on several pieces 
but one forgives this defect in view of the skill that placed the 
enamels. 
q&Pg 
"i -:-:,* 
/ r 
BELLEEK BOWL— DOROTHEA WARREN O'HARA 
The shape of this Belleek bowl was designed by Dorothea Warren O'Hara, also the decoration. Enamels used: Green No. 1, 
Dull Yellow and Cobalt Blue. Gather enamel together with Warren's Enamel medium and thin with fresh 
turpentine. Grind until very smooth. Float on enamel with china liner No. 2. 
