*本网站内容仅供个人学习、研究使用,请勿用于商业用途。

中国非物质文化遗产
基因数据库

2,978
131
点击查看包含数据量中国非物质文化遗产基因数据库

TRADITIONOW

条件筛选
时间筛选
配色筛选
42%

Bottle with Coiling Dragon

Period:Ming dynasty (1368–1644), Wanli period (1573–1620)
Date:late 16th century
Culture:China
Medium:Porcelain with transparent glaze (Dehua ware)
Dimensions:H. 8 1/4 in. (21 cm)
Classification:Ceramics
Credit Line:Rogers Fund, 1918
Accession Number:18.56.60
Archaeological evidence indicates that the kilns near Dehua in Fujian Province on China ’ s southeastern coast opened in the late thirteenth century and flourished from the sixteenth to the eighteenth. Characterized by thick, lustrous glazes, Dehua wares, both religious figures and items for use on a scholar ’ s desk, were exported to Europe in the seventeenth to nineteenth century. They are often known in Western writings by the French term blanc de chine, or “ China white, ” which originated in nineteenth-century scholarship.

推荐图集

42%

色彩分析

30 %
25 %
16 %
8 %

主要色彩
LAB
RGB
HSB
333333 (29.55%)
L 21.25
A 0
B 0
R 51
G 51
B 51
H
S 0%
B 20%
666666 (24.76%)
L 43.19
A 0
B 0
R 102
G 102
B 102
H
S 0%
B 40%
999999 (16.22%)
L 63.22
A 0
B 0
R 153
G 153
B 153
H
S 0%
B 60%
CCCCCC (7.59%)
L 82.05
A 0
B 0
R 204
G 204
B 204
H
S 0%
B 80%
CCCC99 (6.51%)
L 80.92
A -8.17
B 25.51
R 204
G 204
B 153
H 60°
S 25%
B 80%

应用设计案例推荐

设计说明

Period:Ming dynasty (1368–1644), Wanli period (1573–1620)
Date:late 16th century
Culture:China
Medium:Porcelain with transparent glaze (Dehua ware)
Dimensions:H. 8 1/4 in. (21 cm)
Classification:Ceramics
Credit Line:Rogers Fund, 1918
Accession Number:18.56.60
Archaeological evidence indicates that the kilns near Dehua in Fujian Province on China ’ s southeastern coast opened in the late thirteenth century and flourished from the sixteenth to the eighteenth. Characterized by thick, lustrous glazes, Dehua wares, both religious figures and items for use on a scholar ’ s desk, were exported to Europe in the seventeenth to nineteenth century. They are often known in Western writings by the French term blanc de chine, or “ China white, ” which originated in nineteenth-century scholarship.