Hi Peter Another amazing video. I feel I am at the university of Chinese porcelain. These videos are so helpful especially to those of us who simply don't get to handle many authentic porcelains. Your work is really appreciated!
Thanks so much, I hope these video's serve as a useful start for anyone interested in the subject. I always urge folks without having seen a lot of pieces to buy from sources they can rely on. It's why we've done the "News Letter" page now for years on Bidamount and the recently added "eBay Today" page. All are things we've already checked out. Thanks again for your kind words. Best Peter bidamount.com/chinese-art-asian-antiques-auction-news-letter-ebay bidamount.com/bidamount-asian-chinese-art-newsletter
I maybe a late comer' but i love your videos. I love learning about all this and love learning it all from you with your obvious passion for it all. Thx P. Combs
Thank you Peter! This is a great video to get us ready for the video soon to come on showing the differences between the earlier vs later copies of Chinese porcelain! I really enjoyed the video, and who cares how long it is, the longer the better as far as I'm concerned. 😀👍
On many I have no idea how they will be, I don't have a script or anything and they take as long as they take to go through. On some I keep a few notes for exact prices on occasion, but beyond that, I just talk about what I am seeing. I am glad very much that you do not mind the length..Best Peter
I love all your videos. I'm hooked and have been binge watching for days. Even fell asleep with one of your playlists playing, and woke up feeling like I was smarter in antique Chinese porcelain! Please keep up the great work. It's very much appreciated. Thank you.
Awesome video. Great helpfull tips. I would like to see more videos like this. I love to expand my knowledge on how to date chinese porcelain and learn quality.
Thank you very much. I really loved this and I will try and view it a few times as I can learn a lot your knowledgeable commentary. . Greetings from Melbourne, Australia.
What a great vid ! have a fascination for oriental art in general and just recently started to collect Chinese porcelain. Listening to an expert in the field is a must, thank you !
Thank you!!! I am fascinated with Chinese porcelain especially the Flambe vases.... started collecting about 3 years ago =) .... thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Thank you for all the information...I don't think I noticed any images of Moon Goddess Chang-o and her husband Yi...were they common images for export china? Thank you again.
Thanks so much for your effort Peter!!! it would be very cool if you could start with an original earlier piece followed by a later 20th-century piece or copy to really get the differences. Really appreciate your work and videos!
You have made me to understand more than ever about famille rose paintings on porcelain, Peter. Thanks for all the efforts you have put in to realise this informative video. With greetings from the Netherlands
Thanks so much, its obviously not everything you need to know, still be cautious, but we do hope it's will serve as a foundation or part of one. We will do more, and have a number of them already posted. BEst Peter
I had mentioned a few weeks ago we were working on it, but it took a while to figure out how to do it and then gather all of the images. We'll do another on enamel ground pieces and other types, but thought this would be a good start. When we have a minute, we'll load all of the images used onto the Bidamount.com Blog, you can greatly enlarge them that way. The video will also be embedded there. Best Peter
Excellent teaching! Appreciation of the talent and intricate work that went into artwork on the older pieces hitting home through this video. Looking forward to your future videos. I thank you for dedicating the time and effort it takes to put these videos together.
Thank you so much. This kind of educational material is really invaluable. Seems the key to this one is to examine the painterly-ness of the enameling.
Excellent examples. I'd love to see an exhibit of just famille rose of this quality. I've seen them at museums only as inclusions in more diversified collections.
It is so hard to get good information on Chinese Porcelain. This was really helpful! I would it be possible to do a videoo on Dehua of Monochromes. These can be hard. Thank you so much for the great effort.
The French terminology comes from writings of French Jesuits who used these terms while communicating by letter home, and it became the adopted terminology used in the west. Most of the letters were from the 19th C. Best Peter
@@PeterCombs Thank you Peter, I am half way through this video, busy day ! I could listen to you for hours ! SO much to learn. I collect antiques in my own way and friends keep asking me how I know of Something is real or Worth Something and I tell them that it is by looking, touching if possible and asking and in the end your senses know. I once picked up a small hand held painted mirror in a pile of utter Junk and knew at once that it was 18th century, paid 80cents for it. A best friend and I used to scan the stalls in markets in London and spot the good stuff at once, I have a small ivory Buffalo found amongst plastic for exemple. The hunt is fun, finding where to put stuff is harder !
Peter, the green in the hair may possibly be the result of an artist with red-green color blindness. My older brother painted a watercolor of me with green hair thinking he was using brown(my actual hair color). Yes my brother is red-green colorblind, but is a highly skilled artist. 10% of all men are colorblind. Including myself.
I went to a habitat sale and bought an 8 inch immortal for one dollar Its iron red detail with a staff his moustache is very intriguing has I believe a phoenix bird on his back with greens and blues.It has a bunch of intriquit symbols but I could feel I got a deal however it has a six characters mark on the bottom with China in a circle.
wonderful video; thank you so much I guess something which is confusing with famille rose, and blue and white, porcelain is the production of domestic imperial and non-imperial wares side by side through the different dynasties; so a buyer now may see a deer vase, for example, in a regional or local auction with a qianlong mark and think , well it's obviously not imperial quality or of the period, it doesn't have all the shading , and details in the brush strokes , but it could be a later C19th non-imperial copy.... whereas it's much more likely to be a modern reproduction.
99.9% of the Deer Vases that turn up in regional auction houses are modern copies. This includes ones purportedly made during the 19th C. In my entire career, I've never seen one yet that's authentic. They made very few during the 19th C. A few have gone through the major auction houses, but not many year over year. Best Peter
the deer pattern used were often very similar with variations in colors. As was seen on one of the three examples, a few of the deer are positioned slightly differently, the "white " deer was facing away his head turned on one. Best Peter
Thank you so much, Peter! Your work, knowledge, and generous effort is much appreciated.
Lovely introduction to understanding the differences between 18th. and 19th. century Famille Rose Chinese porcelain. Many Thanks.
Peter you are amazing how you know so much do you have time for holidays
Hi Peter
Another amazing video. I feel I am at the university of Chinese porcelain. These videos are so helpful especially to those of us who simply don't get to handle many authentic porcelains. Your work is really appreciated!
Thanks so much, I hope these video's serve as a useful start for anyone interested in the subject. I always urge folks without having seen a lot of pieces to buy from sources they can rely on. It's why we've done the "News Letter" page now for years on Bidamount and the recently added "eBay Today" page. All are things we've already checked out. Thanks again for your kind words. Best Peter
bidamount.com/chinese-art-asian-antiques-auction-news-letter-ebay
bidamount.com/bidamount-asian-chinese-art-newsletter
I maybe a late comer' but i love your videos. I love learning about all this and love learning it all from you with your obvious passion for it all. Thx P. Combs
Combs rocks.
We have yellow butterfly tea set from 17th century?
Wow wow wow! This is a very awesome video! Thanks Peter for sharing your knowledge and experience, and thanks for putting so much time to make it!!
Thank you! Awesome work, many pages scribbled down what to look for! 🤓
Thank you Peter! This is a great video to get us ready for the video soon to come on showing the differences between the earlier vs later copies of Chinese porcelain! I really enjoyed the video, and who cares how long it is, the longer the better as far as I'm concerned. 😀👍
On many I have no idea how they will be, I don't have a script or anything and they take as long as they take to go through. On some I keep a few notes for exact prices on occasion, but beyond that, I just talk about what I am seeing. I am glad very much that you do not mind the length..Best Peter
This video is a treasure, thanks Mr combs, really appreciate.
Thank you Peter! These masterclass type of video are my some of my favorites! Keep em' coming.
More are in the works...Best Peter and thanks!!
I love all your videos. I'm hooked and have been binge watching for days. Even fell asleep with one of your playlists playing, and woke up feeling like I was smarter in antique Chinese porcelain! Please keep up the great work. It's very much appreciated. Thank you.
Another wonderful video. Regret didn't find it before. Lots of insight, Really enjoyful. Great piece. Thank you, Peter.
Awesome video. Great helpfull tips. I would like to see more videos like this. I love to expand my knowledge on how to date chinese porcelain and learn quality.
We are planning to do more as time permits on a range of porcelains. Best Peter
Thank you very much. I really loved this and I will try and view it a few times as I can learn a lot your knowledgeable commentary. . Greetings from Melbourne, Australia.
You're very welcome! Best Peter
Thank you for taking the time to put this together, I look forward to the next installment!
they are fun to do for us too! More will follow. Best Peter
Thank you Peter, Best Wishes, Chris.
Thank you Chris, have a good weekend..! Best Peter
Thank you very much for sharing your wealth of amazing knowledge!! It was very educational video
I just discovered your website last week. 😊❤
Great video! Very informative!
What a great vid ! have a fascination for oriental art in general and just recently started to collect Chinese porcelain. Listening to an expert in the field is a must, thank you !
Thank you!!! I am fascinated with Chinese porcelain especially the Flambe vases.... started collecting about 3 years ago =) .... thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Great video as always ! Thank you Peter !
Loved this sharing of knowledge. Thanks
A fine collection of study pieces. Very well explained. A video I will watch several times!
Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge. Nice presentation!
Peter, you did a great job! Thank you so much for this very informative video. Cannot wait for your second part!
Thanks a lot Peter to you and all the staff
Each video is great this one is so dense with infos that is a magnificent gift
It's a lot to absorb in one go, it will be here for later and always. Best Peter
Peter Combs I’m savouring it with so much pleasure
I am soooo grateful for these educational videos! Fantastic job, thank you very much!
Thank you for all the information...I don't think I noticed any images of Moon Goddess Chang-o and her husband Yi...were they common images for export china? Thank you again.
Thanks so much for your effort Peter!!! it would be very cool if you could start with an original earlier piece followed by a later 20th-century piece or copy to really get the differences. Really appreciate your work and videos!
Earlier and later copies are in the works, I thought for starters seeing many good examples as a visual tune up would be a good start. Best Peter
You have made me to understand more than ever about famille rose paintings on porcelain, Peter. Thanks for all the efforts you have put in to realise this informative video. With greetings from the Netherlands
Thanks so much, its obviously not everything you need to know, still be cautious, but we do hope it's will serve as a foundation or part of one. We will do more, and have a number of them already posted. BEst Peter
Thanks for all work and effort you put into these videos Peter, great info really enjoyed this video will watch many times
THanks David, I do hope folks will use them as a reference. Best Peter
Thanks Peter, just the job!
Many thanks Peter. Great informative video.
Great video as always Peter. Thank you. I imagine I will be referring back to this often.
I had mentioned a few weeks ago we were working on it, but it took a while to figure out how to do it and then gather all of the images. We'll do another on enamel ground pieces and other types, but thought this would be a good start.
When we have a minute, we'll load all of the images used onto the Bidamount.com Blog, you can greatly enlarge them that way. The video will also be embedded there. Best Peter
This video was exceptional. Thank you.🌺🌸🌼
Excellent teaching! Appreciation of the talent and intricate work that went into artwork on the older pieces hitting home through this video. Looking forward to your future videos. I thank you for dedicating the time and effort it takes to put these videos together.
Thank you so much. This kind of educational material is really invaluable. Seems the key to this one is to examine the painterly-ness of the enameling.
Loved the video, very informative and interesting. Thank You!
Peter has done so many videos he is amazing person he also owns a lot of porcelain
you are awesome.. thank you so much for teaching me about chinese art:)
Excellent examples. I'd love to see an exhibit of just famille rose of this quality. I've seen them at museums only as inclusions in more diversified collections.
Excellent video, really enjoyed it, thank you Peter 👍
Think i know what tp look for now! Almost looks like watercolor
It is so hard to get good information on Chinese Porcelain. This was really helpful! I would it be possible to do a videoo on Dehua of Monochromes. These can be hard. Thank you so much for the great effort.
love your videos. Do you do private assessment of pieces or suggest a way to have pieces evaluated online?
Thank you for this. May I ask why the term ' Famille Rose' and 'Famille Verte' and why in French ?
The French terminology comes from writings of French Jesuits who used these terms while communicating by letter home, and it became the adopted terminology used in the west. Most of the letters were from the 19th C. Best Peter
@@PeterCombs Thank you Peter, I am half way through this video, busy day ! I could listen to you for hours ! SO much to learn. I collect antiques in my own way and friends keep asking me how I know of Something is real or Worth Something and I tell them that it is by looking, touching if possible and asking and in the end your senses know. I once picked up a small hand held painted mirror in a pile of utter Junk and knew at once that it was 18th century, paid 80cents for it. A best friend and I used to scan the stalls in markets in London and spot the good stuff at once, I have a small ivory Buffalo found amongst plastic for exemple. The hunt is fun, finding where to put stuff is harder !
Very interesting. Thank you.
wonderful teaching thankyou
Thank you so much!
Very good easy to follow thanks a lot from uk
Great knowledge
AMAZING
THANK YOU
Good info thsnk you
Informative
Peter, the green in the hair may possibly be the result of an artist with red-green color blindness. My older brother painted a watercolor of me with green hair thinking he was using brown(my actual hair color). Yes my brother is red-green colorblind, but is a highly skilled artist. 10% of all men are colorblind. Including myself.
I went to a habitat sale and bought an 8 inch immortal for one dollar Its iron red detail with a staff his moustache is very intriguing has I believe a phoenix bird on his back with greens and blues.It has a bunch of intriquit symbols but I could feel I got a deal however it has a six characters mark on the bottom with China in a circle.
a silly request: could you possibly use your finger to point, it takes me a few seconds to find the little dot of the pointer?
On future video's we'll be using a Yellow Highligher on the Mouse pointer that will do a much better job. Thanks for the suggestion.
wonderful video; thank you so much
I guess something which is confusing with famille rose, and blue and white, porcelain is the production of domestic imperial and non-imperial wares side by side through the different dynasties; so a buyer now may see a deer vase, for example, in a regional or local auction with a qianlong mark and think , well it's obviously not imperial quality or of the period, it doesn't have all the shading , and details in the brush strokes , but it could be a later C19th non-imperial copy.... whereas it's much more likely to be a modern reproduction.
99.9% of the Deer Vases that turn up in regional auction houses are modern copies. This includes ones purportedly made during the 19th C. In my entire career, I've never seen one yet that's authentic. They made very few during the 19th C. A few have gone through the major auction houses, but not many year over year. Best Peter
멋찝니다~~^
AT 5.29, THEN 6.00 The Deer are 100% the same, same placement everything! just Different colours, is this unusual ?
the deer pattern used were often very similar with variations in colors. As was seen on one of the three examples, a few of the deer are positioned slightly differently, the "white " deer was facing away his head turned on one. Best Peter
👍👍👍