Log in or Sign up
Antiques Board
Home
Forums
>
Antique Forums
>
Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain
>
Chinese Porcelain Writing and Markings. Please Help.
>
Reply to Thread
Message:
<p>[QUOTE="Ladybranch, post: 231320, member: 44"]Agree with the above opinions. This has <i>Qianlong Nian Zhi fake markings. </i>Scroll about 1/2 way down the following page to the subsection under: <i>Qianlong Nian Zhi - Qianlong Period Make </i>that has the following info:</p><p><i><br /></i></p><p><i>"Following marks are in <i>Kaishu</i> (normal script) style. This is the present-day regular script, which has been in existence now for almost 2000 years. As opposed to seal script, which is drawing, this is <i>hand writing</i>. None of the following marks are of the Qianlong period despite that they say so. See comments next to each individual mark for an approximate date."</i></p><p><br /></p><p>Look specifically at #260, 335, 1089, 1377, 1073, etc.... They are being dated from the 1940s to 1990s or later. Like the above suggests "See comments next to each individual mark for an approximate date."</p><p><a href="http://gotheborg.com/marks/20thcenturychina.shtml" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="http://gotheborg.com/marks/20thcenturychina.shtml" rel="nofollow">http://gotheborg.com/marks/20thcenturychina.shtml</a></p><p><br /></p><p>--- Susan</p><p><br /></p><p>Edit: Janetpjohn beat me![/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Ladybranch, post: 231320, member: 44"]Agree with the above opinions. This has [I]Qianlong Nian Zhi fake markings. [/I]Scroll about 1/2 way down the following page to the subsection under: [I]Qianlong Nian Zhi - Qianlong Period Make [/I]that has the following info: [I] "Following marks are in [I]Kaishu[/I] (normal script) style. This is the present-day regular script, which has been in existence now for almost 2000 years. As opposed to seal script, which is drawing, this is [I]hand writing[/I]. None of the following marks are of the Qianlong period despite that they say so. See comments next to each individual mark for an approximate date."[/I] Look specifically at #260, 335, 1089, 1377, 1073, etc.... They are being dated from the 1940s to 1990s or later. Like the above suggests "See comments next to each individual mark for an approximate date." [URL]http://gotheborg.com/marks/20thcenturychina.shtml[/URL] --- Susan Edit: Janetpjohn beat me![/QUOTE]
Your name or email address:
Do you already have an account?
No, create an account now.
Yes, my password is:
Forgot your password?
Stay logged in
Antiques Board
Home
Forums
>
Antique Forums
>
Pottery, Glass, and Porcelain
>
Chinese Porcelain Writing and Markings. Please Help.
>
Home
Home
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Activity
Recent Posts
Forums
Forums
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Posts
Gallery
Gallery
Quick Links
Search Media
New Media
Members
Members
Quick Links
Notable Members
Registered Members
Current Visitors
Recent Activity
New Profile Posts
Menu
Search
Search titles only
Posted by Member:
Separate names with a comma.
Newer Than:
Search this thread only
Search this forum only
Display results as threads
Useful Searches
Recent Posts
More...