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Peter, thank you for your knowledge and insight as I truly am grateful for the information you are sharing. My collection is small and consists of reproductions and a few older pieces. My love of Asian Art has been with me since I was a child, and I enjoy painting oriental scenes on canvas as well as dabble in ink on rice paper.
Highly informative n enjoyed these videos you are putting out. Have a fair share of figurines, mostly Kuan Yin, laughing Buddha n Kuan Yu n like to share some of them with you.
Also visit us at Bidamount.com , we have a lot of free educational material on the Home page linked to over 500 auction catalogs and books you can read online, our own archives, a FORUM and links to Museums and Auction houses...we hope you enjoy it all. Best Peter
Learning... Always learning... Thank you for this great video, Peter. I'm late to the party, but I got here eventually! There's so much to know, and so little time... But I'm getting a little more confident in my buying since I discovered your channel. So thank you for that.
You might find our site Bidamount.com useful too, we have pages of handpicked things we've found on eBay and Catawiki and are adding a Member/Subscriber section soon with selected items from Liveauctioneers, Invaluable, Bidsquare Sotheby's etc...Best Peter
I buy Chinese and Japanese porcelain at garage sales and estate sales and auctions. In the future I think it will be hard to find. Hoard it now before its to late.
Annie Zhang You are quite right Annie, I should have been more specific and said the 9 Peach pattern on the plate shown was developed during the Qianlong period, thanks for reminding me. I have edited with credit to you for reminding me! Many thanks. Peter
I have a 10" rose medallion plate with a red quianlong mark. The detailed outline & coloring is very carefully done. What seems unusual is the painting design continues right onto the plate rim without a separate defined gold or brown painted rim. Also the opposing panels are mirror images of one another (not just the same image around the other side). Any ideas?
Hello Judith, We have a service for just this kind of thing on the Bidamount site. We charge just $12, here's a link. bidamount.com/chinese-antiques-identification-assistant-inquiry-service Best regards, Peter
The porcelain makers purposely left there lines behind the porcelain plaque is to reduce contraction during firing process. Contraction may cause uneveness of the plaque surface. The lines are not joints.
Annie Zhang My understanding was they were added to serve as an applied joint to do as you said to reduce shrinkage. It's interesting to note than on occasion they have no line at all. GLad you like the video.
the 18th century style plate that marked "hong Xian nian zhi" is not 19th century, it should be after 1911,or the mark is fake, someone put it on a late 19th century's plate
When you misread your own notes its pretty easy...I goofed on that. We realized it about a month afterwards, I tried to edit the section out and was unable to do so. Best Peter
At the beginning of this video you ask for opinion to do the next ones better. Well first of all since you do these videos kind of professionally I would get a very good microphone not just the one on your laptop. The sound is not very good my friend. You have a tendency to raise your voice in the middle of the sentence or so and it is not very pleasant to hear. Second - I would absolutely make more closeups not only on foot of the porcelain or just when you feel like it on the main picture but systematically at least 2 or 3 closeups on EACH object. Otherwise thanks for your videos they are quite informative.
Hi Alex, since doing this particular video a few years ago, one of our first, we've gotten better mic's, cameras and so forth. Like everything, it's a learning curve. Especially for the tech challenged like me. Glad you enjoy them and thanks for the suggestions, always welcome..Best Peter
Subscribe for our weekly auction results video, auction previews at Sotheby's, Christie's and Bonhams And results from the BIDAMOUNT.com Global Member Auction Pages...
I have one of these if interested
Thank you for sharing these different pieces and all the information on what is important to see to confirm authenticity.
Peter, learned again with your so eloquently lecture, something I don't know that much about
Great info🙌
Peter, thank you for your knowledge and insight as I truly am grateful for the information you are sharing. My collection is small and consists of reproductions and a few older pieces. My love of Asian Art has been with me since I was a child, and I enjoy painting oriental scenes on canvas as well as dabble in ink on rice paper.
Fantastic ! Lovely objects ! Thanks Peter for sharing !
Highly informative n enjoyed these videos you are putting out. Have a fair share of figurines, mostly Kuan Yin, laughing Buddha n Kuan Yu n like to share some of them with you.
Awesome content! Ive subscribed, and can't wait to watch all your videos. Thanks so much!
Also visit us at Bidamount.com , we have a lot of free educational material on the Home page linked to over 500 auction catalogs and books you can read online, our own archives, a FORUM and links to Museums and Auction houses...we hope you enjoy it all. Best Peter
thank you
Learning... Always learning... Thank you for this great video, Peter. I'm late to the party, but I got here eventually! There's so much to know, and so little time... But I'm getting a little more confident in my buying since I discovered your channel. So thank you for that.
You might find our site Bidamount.com useful too, we have pages of handpicked things we've found on eBay and Catawiki and are adding a Member/Subscriber section soon with selected items from Liveauctioneers, Invaluable, Bidsquare Sotheby's etc...Best Peter
Very educational video - some gorgeous pieces - particularly liked mid 19th C Kwan Yin piece.
لدي بعض الخزف الصيني عليها مثل هاده الألوان...أريد معرفة هل هو قديم أم لا...وشكرآ
I buy Chinese and Japanese porcelain at garage sales and estate sales and auctions. In the future I think it will be hard to find. Hoard it now before its to late.
Very informative, thanks!
Very good piece of art porcelain
Actually peach pattern started at Yongzheng period, which usually had eight peaches in total rather than nine in later Qianglong period.
Annie Zhang You are quite right Annie, I should have been more specific and said the 9 Peach pattern on the plate shown was developed during the Qianlong period, thanks for reminding me. I have edited with credit to you for reminding me! Many thanks. Peter
Thank you so much for sharing this video on RUclips channel very helpful
you're weIcome, we have quite a few, feeI free to subscribe and check them out. We add new ones each week. Peter
I have a beautiful hand painted vase from china. I would love if I could find out if it's worth anything.
Great video, as always ! A GE ware - JUN ware video soon ?? Thank you Peter !
Thanks
皮特,講的很詳細,謝謝你
I have a 10" rose medallion plate with a red quianlong mark. The detailed outline & coloring is very carefully done. What seems unusual is the painting design continues right onto the plate rim without a separate defined gold or brown painted rim. Also the opposing panels are mirror images of one another (not just the same image around the other side). Any ideas?
Very informative!
+Donna Davis we do our best and we hope you find it all useful.
Keren familerose porcelain..
Great I love it
This video help too much
I have some pieces if you care I will send you a picture for what I have
Nice and Informative, Thank you so much
Great video !
Very good
Thx u
멋찝니다~~
لدي بعض الخزف الصيني عليها مثل هاده الألوان...أريد جوابآ وشكرآ
Do you do appraisals? Nothing official, I am just looking to get an idea of value on a few pieces.
I wish you would have quoted value on these pieces.
I have a mini vase that I would love to have identified, but don't have a clue who to ask. Do you think you could help me?
Hello Judith, We have a service for just this kind of thing on the Bidamount site. We charge just $12, here's a link. bidamount.com/chinese-antiques-identification-assistant-inquiry-service Best regards, Peter
Hello I'm wondering if anyone can give any tip on impressed words or#s How cani read these words
The porcelain makers purposely left there lines behind the porcelain plaque is to reduce contraction during firing process. Contraction may cause uneveness of the plaque surface. The lines are not joints.
Annie Zhang My understanding was they were added to serve as an applied joint to do as you said to reduce shrinkage. It's interesting to note than on occasion they have no line at all. GLad you like the video.
Annie Zhang any if i send you a pic of the mark of my pottery just one can you tell me.what it say
I have a vase I would love to know if it is worth anything
Totally love this channel . Interesting photo at the end of the vid . u
the 18th century style plate that marked "hong Xian nian zhi" is not 19th century, it should be after 1911,or the mark is fake, someone put it on a late 19th century's plate
really heavy
Avalibal in Intex me
How can you date a plate with "洪宪年制“ which means " Made in 1916" as a mid 18 to 19 century product?
When you misread your own notes its pretty easy...I goofed on that. We realized it about a month afterwards, I tried to edit the section out and was unable to do so. Best Peter
Hi Peter Combs I have a beautiful Golden Dragon I would like to send a picture of the Golden Dragon if you can check for me
I have one 18th chinese blue and waite ginger ja vase if you can check
I don't want to be naive I don't like Rose 🌹But I like MacDonald sorry
At the beginning of this video you ask for opinion to do the next ones better. Well first of all since you do these videos kind of professionally I would get a very good microphone not just the one on your laptop. The sound is not very good my friend. You have a tendency to raise your voice in the middle of the sentence or so and it is not very pleasant to hear.
Second - I would absolutely make more closeups not only on foot of the porcelain or just when you feel like it on the main picture but systematically at least 2 or 3 closeups on EACH object. Otherwise thanks for your videos they are quite informative.
Hi Alex, since doing this particular video a few years ago, one of our first, we've gotten better mic's, cameras and so forth. Like everything, it's a learning curve. Especially for the tech challenged like me. Glad you enjoy them and thanks for the suggestions, always welcome..Best Peter
Please translate your program to Arabic languages to be more useful, thanks so much, F. F , J.