Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What are the patterns of porcelain?

What are the patterns of porcelain?

The group pattern was first seen in Linru kiln in Sui Dynasty, and there was no stamen in the center of a group. A chrysanthemum with a circle in the middle with the surname of the workshop owner or craftsman printed on it. Peach blossom patterns are common in Ming and Qing porcelain paintings, and are often used to set off the beauty of girls. Some of them are accompanied by water ripples, which are called "falling flowers and flowing water". In Qing Dynasty, ball flowers were called hydrangeas. It is made of flower heads of different sizes into a round or oval shape, which is evenly distributed in the decorative belt of the vessel. Generally, the space outside the pattern is larger than the proportion of the pattern, which has strong adaptability to device types. Broken branch pattern is to decorate a broken flower in the prominent part of an object, which has nothing to do with the surrounding patterns and appears in a balanced form. It has been widely used since the Yuan Dynasty, such as broken peony, broken plum and broken peach. "Three Friends in Cold Year" refers to pine, bamboo and plum. This is a common theme in Chinese painting, and it is often decorated on utensils after the Song Dynasty. Full patterns, commonly known as "flowers", are painted on the decorative surfaces of utensils, with different shapes and dense overlapping, just like a collection of flowers.