15 Dec 2004 A restricted mināʾi technology continues in lajvardina wares—cobalt blue glazed vessels and tiles decorated in a limited range of overglaze 

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Lajvardina vessels have been excavated at Taḵt-e Solaymān, Solṭāniya, and Saray Berke (the capital of the Golden Horn on the Volga); the sources of most museum pieces are unknown. Taken en masse, forms are limited, and closed vessels are copied from pre-Mongol inlaid metalwork forms, as are the decorative panels of “Y” and “T” frets.

The Photographic Archive of the Isidore and Anne Falk Information Center for Jewish Art and Life The Photographic Archive of the Isidore and Anne Falk Information Center for Jewish Art and Life This bowl exhibits a rare glaze type referred to as lajvardina, from the Persian word lajvard, or lapis lazuli (a deep blue colored stone containing gold inclusions). Its design comprises small squares of gold leaf, carefully arranged into intricate patterns with delicate red and white overpainting. Lajvardina wares. There are few dated Il-khanid lajvardina objects. Richard Ettinghausen listed a large star tile dated 1315 (Ettinghausen, “Dated Faience,” p. 1691) and a smaller example dated 1304 (ibid., pp. 1666-96).

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The term lajvardina seems to occur first in a sixteenth-century copy of the well-known early fourteenth-century treatise on the manufacture of tiles and ceramic wares by Abu'l-Qasim, where it is confused with what is commonly called mina'i ware. See Allan 1973, pp. 114\-15, 120. 3.

Title: Lajvardina Ware Ewer with Rooster's Head. Owner: Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. Country of Origin: Iran. Date of Creation: 1300 AD. Tags: N/A.

Article by Patty's Pottery. 82. Lajvardina ware ceramics are named for their resemblance to the dark blue stone lapis lazuli.

Lajvardina ware

13.May.2013 - Lustre-ware from Kashan, Iran, c. 1260-1285 (from Perpetual Glory: Medieval Islamic Ceramics from the Harvey B. Plotnick Collection by Oya 

Lajvardina ware

Topography and occurrence of ceramic raw materials. Iraq.

Jug late 13th-early 14th century . Jug late 13th-early 14th century . Showing objects 1 - 1 of 1 .
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Lajvardina ware

200 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn, New York 11238-6052 Subway: Eastern The Far Eastern influence is clearly visible on lajvardina wares. By the beginning of the fourteenth century another type of underglaze-painted ware appeared: the Sultanabad ware. The shapes and designs of these vessels were quite distinct from earlier examples and, once more, Far Eastern influence is obvious.

Slip-painted ware (Nishapur type) Slip-painted ware (Garrus type) Fritware. Silhouette ware. Raqqa ware.
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Vessels with "lajvardina" decoration present all the characteristics of prestige ceramics. Luxury ware set off with gold, they owe their name to their characteristic deep blue "sang-i-lajvard", the Persian name for lapis lazuli, which indicates the colour of the cobalt oxide used in the glaze.

This photo is in 4 albums · bowl · dish · ceramic · pottery · Lajvardina ware · Iran · 13th century CE · Asian Art Museum  Unlike minai ware, however, these later enamelled ceramics primarily them to be known as lajvardina ware, from the Persian word lajvard (lapis lazuli). Lājvard ware, also called Lajvardina Ware, type of vase from Kāshān, Iran, mentioned in Abū al-Qāsim's treatise on ceramics (1301). Vases were executed in  PERSIA (KASHAN?), 13th CENTURY.