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I picked up a nice pretty Asian blue & white slender vase about 7" tall. It's in a shape I associate with Arita/Fukugawa but no markings on the base & without a defined separate "foot". Beautiful pure white glossy porcelain with little groups of landscape oriental features & plenty of white open spaces. What's striking is the color of the blue under the glaze - its more of a pastel grayish-blue, which I think is prettier than the strong cobalt blues. It might be Chinese or Japanese ware but the pure white delicate quality of the porcelain makes me think it could be something like Hirado & it's keeping me guessing. The overall effect is of a soft gray-blue water color on a bright white background
Thank you so much for this video leading us through a selection of such beautiful blue and white Ming ceramics. Absolutely fascinating and greatly appreciated! Best wishes from the UK.
Thanks for sharing your experience of Chinese antique porcelain. 80% of these examples are older copies-made during Qing-copy Ming, Republic time copy Qing and Ming. Usually, the foot mark was done by one or two people, his handwriting is consistent. From the handwriting, many of the ChengHua pieces are copies made in Qing and/or early Republic period-high time in antique collection. More and more Chinese and Taiwanese scholars make UA-cam videos teach how to identify real and copies of antique Chinese work of art. a few have English subtitle. very interesting and educational.
I enjoy this video, I love when people decorated with the blue and white Chinese porcelain , it's so beautiful with black , red especially on white are yellow walls.
I am proud that Muslims contribute into the history of the Chinese porcelain, I'm a Muslim and I'm proud of it, I ask God for Peter to become a Muslim as well, and we meet in heaven all together.
i am really enjoying your videos! thank you for producing them. i wish you had explained a bit more what makes the provincial pieces provincial. i assume that it's just a lack of sophistication, but i could be wrong. thanks again for taking the time to educate me!
I have a question about Chinese Marks on Porcelain Figurine that are not colored, rather they appear to be inbedded into the porcelain fro the Kangxi Emperor reign period. Do you have a comment or two on that.
Its a learning curve, but stick to it! It is a lot of fun, also look into buying some books and build a good library. We have several a pages of good ones we recommend on the Bidamount site, you can find the links on the "Navigator " page bidamount.com/bidamount-asian-art-antiques-site-guide in the THE SHOP section.
you are right on that, you and my wife who lived in China and speaks the language is forever trying to get my pronunciation corrected, I'll keep trying. I can massacre French just as well!
En el minuto 2:43 se muestra un xuande de 1426 twngo un florero o jarron de 25cm. de alto y como 86 a su alrededor con las mismas caracteristicas en su base solo muestra un triangulo blanco podria ud. sugerirme un valuador en Mexico
+Skye True-Hagenstein hi, no it's actually a birdfeeder. They have made them steadily right up until today. If you look at the picture, the wood piece attached to it for affixing it to a bird cage. If you need help with something you've inherited, get in touch with ys through the "Contact Us' tab on the Bidamount.com home page, our email address and phone numbers are there. Thanks for watching the videos. ..Peter Combs
I have a small dish that I bought in Borneo in 1974, they swore it was Ming and I never believed it, however, I do think it is old. Is there anywhere on line that does appraisals? I'm interested in the age more than the value.
At 7:53. This is not a Jiajing porcelain but a Wanli porcelain, a later Ming Emperor from the late 1500s and early 1600s. Notice the seal does not have 嘉靖 but 萬曆. Here I would also suspect that this was a fake Wanli porcelain. The characters for Wanli, 萬曆, are written terribly, likely by someone who was not fluent in Chinese. Even the Ming character, 明, has an extra stroke where it doesn't belong. With written Chinese you need to get the details very right and only fluent Chinese writers know this.
Marks are fairly meaningless as far as dating an item goes, unless the rest of the piece can tell you how old it is by it's aspects. So never worry about Marks when it comes to dating and identifying an piece. Best Peter
I live in Calgary can anyone please help me I have numerous Asian items and also a bronze Buddha 16-17 century I can’t seem to get anyone to appraise here
Hello Mr.Peter combs nove tho meet you! Aim in Portugal and i have some Chinese antiques that i buy tho One off theost inportant colector here on Portugal ut was Mr.Maldonado Freitas só he pass away some years agoo but i bot tho One off his 2 dauthers! Can you please sent me a email só i cud sent you some pictures please??thank you very much
At 4:02. What if the characters on the seal at the bottom are wrongly written? Here the 製 character is so sloppily done--lots of missing and messed up strokes--that it would give me pause about the authenticity of this. This may have been a fake Chenghua bowl because the 製 is not properly written. Someone who was fluent in Chinese--like the actual maker of the bowl--would've gotten this just right.
At 4:15. Again, this would give me pause that this was an authentic Zhengde bowl (pronounced "jung-duh"). The 年 character is very incorrectly written. It's not even stylistic Chinese--the wrong stroke is in the very wrong place. No Chinese person would get such a simple character like 年 so wrong.
Wonderful analysis. Learned a lot about Ming porcelains. But your Chinese pronunciation is not good. Xuande is pronounced "shoe-on-duh." The first seven porcelains you presented have at the bottom 大明宣德年製 or "da ming shoe-un-duh nee-and jer." It means, as far as I can tell (I may be wrong about the "yearly mark" bit since this is classical Chinese), "Yearly mark of the Xuande Emperor of the Great Ming." But you should study a bit of Chinese to at least get the imperial reign names right.
Subscribe for our weekly auction results video, auction previews at Sotheby's, Christie's and Bonhams And results from the @t Global Member Auction Pages...
Hello sir I have a piece and I think it is rare and I want to show you it
I picked up a nice pretty Asian blue & white slender vase about 7" tall. It's in a shape I associate with Arita/Fukugawa but no markings on the base & without a defined separate "foot". Beautiful pure white glossy porcelain with little groups of landscape oriental features & plenty of white open spaces. What's striking is the color of the blue under the glaze - its more of a pastel grayish-blue, which I think is prettier than the strong cobalt blues.
It might be Chinese or Japanese ware but the pure white delicate quality of the porcelain makes me think it could be something like Hirado & it's keeping me guessing. The overall effect is of a soft gray-blue water color on a bright white background
Thank you so much for this video leading us through a selection of such beautiful blue and white Ming ceramics. Absolutely fascinating and greatly appreciated! Best wishes from the UK.
Thanks for sharing your experience of Chinese antique porcelain. 80% of these examples are older copies-made during Qing-copy Ming, Republic time copy Qing and Ming. Usually, the foot mark was done by one or two people, his handwriting is consistent. From the handwriting, many of the ChengHua pieces are copies made in Qing and/or early Republic period-high time in antique collection. More and more Chinese and Taiwanese scholars make UA-cam videos teach how to identify real and copies of antique Chinese work of art. a few have English subtitle. very interesting and educational.
Thank you so much for sharing those beautiful ceramics blues and White's ceramics so gorgeous
Fantastic collections.
Thank you Peter Combs👌🥰
I enjoy this video, I love when people decorated with the blue and white Chinese porcelain , it's so beautiful with black , red especially on white are yellow walls.
thats a good combination..I know what you mean, Peter
Thank you so much for sharing your boundless knowledge! I truly appreciate it.
I have a pink ming vase.. It's very rare.. They say it called albiino....
Yogi bear giving an extensive intro on ancient porcelain
Thank you Boo Boo...Peter
I have some Chinese cups and bowls and a serving dish I bought at goodwill paid about 26 dollars for all prices 3 boxes and I love them
I am proud that Muslims contribute into the history of the Chinese porcelain, I'm a Muslim and I'm proud of it, I ask God for Peter to become a Muslim as well, and we meet in heaven all together.
the color is amazing
tuyệt vời cảm ơn công lao bạn đăng phim đồ cổ gốm sứ quý
i am really enjoying your videos! thank you for producing them. i wish you had explained a bit more what makes the provincial pieces provincial. i assume that it's just a lack of sophistication, but i could be wrong. thanks again for taking the time to educate me!
+ho2cultcha you are correct...(sorry about the slow reply)
I am thankful master porcelain antigue are can see....
Thank you Amazing video
amazing artistry
It's really helpful, but I think the "Xuande" mark bowl at 5:25 is an authentic one but not the 16th century, only my own personal opinion, thanks!
Great video you are #1 thanks
I have a question about Chinese Marks on Porcelain Figurine that are not colored, rather they appear to be inbedded into the porcelain fro the Kangxi Emperor reign period. Do you have a comment or two on that.
Awesome. Thank you. Those photos that I sent you are a joke now that I see this. I'll keep trying.
Its a learning curve, but stick to it! It is a lot of fun, also look into buying some books and build a good library. We have several a pages of good ones we recommend on the Bidamount site, you can find the links on the "Navigator " page bidamount.com/bidamount-asian-art-antiques-site-guide in the THE SHOP section.
thank you
Thank you so much
Thank you so much for sharing this information
Ian really enjoying great video thankyou for producing them.
Thank you very much Bharat, it's very much appreciated. Best , Peter
Great videos! I just wanted to point out the correct pronunciation of "xuande" would be more like "shuenn-de" :)
you are right on that, you and my wife who lived in China and speaks the language is forever trying to get my pronunciation corrected, I'll keep trying. I can massacre French just as well!
Thank you do much
absolute beauty.
喜歡你的頻道,作為一個中國人我也喜歡看
So good
I want to sell my some antique items these are original these are more than 100 years old plz tell me how i send photos of those items
Hi .. I am from malaysia..I have a procelain jar but how do I know the actual age?
I have a bowl with 3 character mark Japan. What time period would that be?
I wanna have it
Saya punya cangkir antik cina 2 set
@@untungwaluyo3287 wah
Wa
Super luar biasa salam satu hobi🙏
Hi Peter Combs I have a 14ince bowl get seal on it Emperor picture and seal on it I like to bring to auction place
En el minuto 2:43 se muestra un xuande de 1426 twngo un florero o jarron de 25cm. de alto y como 86 a su alrededor con las mismas caracteristicas en su base solo muestra un triangulo blanco podria ud. sugerirme un valuador en Mexico
Email me some images and I'll take a look for you, our email address is here www.bidamount.com/contact-us/
Also sign up for the weekly Newsletter.
I was wondering if the piece you mentioned was a bird feeder was in fact a chopstick holder.
+Skye True-Hagenstein hi, no it's actually a birdfeeder. They have made them steadily right up until today. If you look at the picture, the wood piece attached to it for affixing it to a bird cage. If you need help with something you've inherited, get in touch with ys through the "Contact Us' tab on the Bidamount.com home page, our email address and phone numbers are there. Thanks for watching the videos. ..Peter Combs
Peter Combs 0
I have a small dish that I bought in Borneo in 1974, they swore it was Ming and I never believed it, however, I do think it is old. Is there anywhere on line that does appraisals? I'm interested in the age more than the value.
Visit OUR Website, BIdamount.com. And click the link for the Identification Assistant , best peter
Wow nice ones
Thanks so much, glad you're enjoying them. Best to you. Peter Combs
Are thankful master porcelain ok .i can see master porcelain.
Thank you for sharing!
Glad to do them, thanks for watching! Best Peter
At 7:53. This is not a Jiajing porcelain but a Wanli porcelain, a later Ming Emperor from the late 1500s and early 1600s. Notice the seal does not have 嘉靖 but 萬曆. Here I would also suspect that this was a fake Wanli porcelain. The characters for Wanli, 萬曆, are written terribly, likely by someone who was not fluent in Chinese. Even the Ming character, 明, has an extra stroke where it doesn't belong. With written Chinese you need to get the details very right and only fluent Chinese writers know this.
卖吗
What about pieces with no mark on the bottom?
Marks are fairly meaningless as far as dating an item goes, unless the rest of the piece can tell you how old it is by it's aspects. So never worry about Marks when it comes to dating and identifying an piece. Best Peter
@@PeterCombs thank you. I have a bowl with no marks.
I need to know how much my saucers r worth
Hi, inside the bird feeder I see some writing in English in a circle, what does that say? at about 5:46 minute marker
It's an oId coIIection or deaier IabeI, not enough of it to read.
I have chinese porcelain..pls help me..
You handphone please
I live in Calgary can anyone please help me I have numerous Asian items and also a bronze Buddha 16-17 century I can’t seem to get anyone to appraise here
you may take photos and send to experts firstly.
Hello Mr.Peter combs nove tho meet you!
Aim in Portugal and i have some Chinese antiques that i buy tho One off theost inportant colector here on Portugal ut was Mr.Maldonado Freitas só he pass away some years agoo but i bot tho One off his 2 dauthers!
Can you please sent me a email só i cud sent you some pictures please??thank you very much
At 4:02. What if the characters on the seal at the bottom are wrongly written? Here the 製 character is so sloppily done--lots of missing and messed up strokes--that it would give me pause about the authenticity of this. This may have been a fake Chenghua bowl because the 製 is not properly written. Someone who was fluent in Chinese--like the actual maker of the bowl--would've gotten this just right.
I like 😍
At 4:15. Again, this would give me pause that this was an authentic Zhengde bowl (pronounced "jung-duh"). The 年 character is very incorrectly written. It's not even stylistic Chinese--the wrong stroke is in the very wrong place. No Chinese person would get such a simple character like 年 so wrong.
👌👍👍👍
Not bowl it is a vase
Bowl emperor
Wonderful analysis. Learned a lot about Ming porcelains. But your Chinese pronunciation is not good. Xuande is pronounced "shoe-on-duh." The first seven porcelains you presented have at the bottom 大明宣德年製 or "da ming shoe-un-duh nee-and jer." It means, as far as I can tell (I may be wrong about the "yearly mark" bit since this is classical Chinese), "Yearly mark of the Xuande Emperor of the Great Ming." But you should study a bit of Chinese to at least get the imperial reign names right.
Okokokok
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😇😂😂😅😂😂😂
ẞ1