I1ERAMIC STUDIO 
exhibit were of a cream white pottery body, fired at a low 
temperature with a soft matt or majolica glaze; some of the 
shapes, especially those carved in low relief, 
were very interesting. 
Mrs. Phillips showed, as usual, a num- 
ber of finely executed figure panels, suitably 
and tastefully framed, some decoratively 
treated on a chased gold ground, but her 
master piece was a large punch bowl, 
charmingly decorated on the inner rim with 
an adaptation of Reginald T. Dick's design 
of dancing figures in soft pinks, violets and 
blues, treated conventionally with a white 
outline. The outside of the bowl was gold 
with a repeated bit of charming color 
glimpsed through an irregular opening 
finished in raised gold. 
Mrs. Anna B. Leonard showed a plate 
and a bowl made of Volkmar's clay at pottery 
his School of Pottery last summer. The 
plate was cast in a mould which she made herself. Mrs. 
Leonard exhibited this piece especially to illustrate the possi- 
bility of the amateur making objects of utility as well as of art. 
POTTERY 
MRS. LEONARD 
MRS. L. VANCE PHILLIPS 
The plate has a light blue grey stannifer enamel glaze with 
the decoration in dark blue. The bowl was built by hand 
from her own design and is simple and artistic in the lines of 
its modeled decoration. The touches of light yellow on 
the grey green matt glaze melted and overflowed the raised 
outlines, which happy accident rather enhanced the effect. 
In overglaze decoration Mrs. Leonard exhibited a number 
of plates with simple decorative treatment in flat enamel. 
In the salad set given as color supplement in this number 
there was a varying depth of tone in the flat washes which 
do not show in the reproduction. 
The design of the orange bowl was given in Keramic 
STUDIO some time ago, for the outside of bowl, but looksequally 
well on the inside (it should not be used outside and inside at the 
same time.) It was carried out in orange and olive green on 
the white china with dark outline, the color effect suggesting 
Polychrome Delft or the Italian faiences. The same design 
was used in lustre on a large punch bowl, the background 
being green lustre over gold, the leaves in flat enamel, the 
oranges in lustre with a wash of ruby over the orange, out- 
lines black and gold bands inside. The smaller bowl in the 
illustration is a treatment of the corn flower in dark blue and 
green enamel, other panels being gold. 
[continued] 
MRS. .LEONARD 
MRS. SAFFORD 
MRS. LEONARD 
