Knowing the color rendering of blue and white porcelain in the Yuan Dynasty, then imitating the color rendering effect of Yuan blue and white porcelain, or the color rendering effect of blue and white porcelain in the Yongxuan period, will you know it well?

For example, the effect of Yuan blue and white, good hair color, verdant blue, plus black and purple spots, isn't it Yuan blue and white?

As for how to use modern chemical blue and white materials to prepare, isn't it just adding and subtracting manganese and iron elements?

It can be said that every time you understand the color effect of a blue and white material, you can imitate many perfect official kiln porcelain.

Knowing the coloring effect of Sumaliqing, you can imitate Yuan blue and white, you can put Yongle blue and white, and you can imitate Xuande blue and white.

These porcelains are all famous porcelains.

The most widely used blue and white material in ancient times, besides Sumaliqing, was followed by Pingpingqing.

Unlike Su Maliqing, Pingpingqing is a real domestic product.

Due to the limited import of Soviet materials, in the Chenghua period of the Ming Dynasty, Pingqing green materials began to be used.

Until the early days of Hongzhi and Zhengde, Jingzhen kilns mostly used Pingpingqing.

Pingpingqing has low iron content and does not appear black spots and halos.

After firing, the color is light and elegant, which becomes the characteristic of Chenghua blue and white.

There are also many advantages of equal green materials, such as elegant and delicate colors.

This domestic green material was mainly used in the early days of Chenghua, Hongzhi and Zhengde.

Its color is also very different from the earlier Su Ma Li Qing.

Equal cyan is uniform, light and elegant, and the color is stable.

The blue and gray blue and white are rendered like cotton wool, quite in the style of ink painting.

The white and warm glazed surface, combined with the hazy blue and white porcelain covered by clouds and fog, has achieved the unique style of blue and white porcelain in this period.

The well-known masterpieces of Pingpingqing include Chenghua blue and white mountain stone flower pattern lid jars, unicorn pattern plates, Jiulong Naohai pattern bowls and so on.

Domestic green materials like this, as long as they are used in the right place, the effect is still very good.

Among the domestic green materials, there are Huiqing materials and Shi Ziqing.

There are many sayings about the origin of Huiqing.

Xinjiang, Yun may be its place of origin, and it is even said that it was imported from the Western Regions.

Its provenance is uncertain, but its qualities are highly representative.

The biggest feature of the back green material is that it is prone to excessive smudges when used alone.

So what to do?Find it a partner Shi Ziqing to mix it with.

The characteristic of this green material is that the color is not bright. It is simple to understand that if there is too much water, add noodles, and if there is too much noodles, add water.

The mixture of Huiqing and Shiziqing has a purple color and can be divided into two types: upper green and middle green.

The former has a bright color and is used for coloring.

The latter has a clear stroke and is used to outline the outline.

The two complement each other and complement each other.

It is this kind of mixed green material that together decorates the blue and white porcelain from the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty to the early Wanli period.

Its representative works include Wanli blue and white plum bottle with dragon and spring pattern, Longqing blue and white dragon and phoenix pattern box, Jiajing blue and white three sheep pattern bowl, etc.

One thing to note here is that the recycled green material was imported at that time.

As the name suggests, it comes from the Western Regions where Muslims gather.

The first-class Huiqing material is also called "Buddha head green", one is a kind of precious green material.

Green material can be used to make blue and white flowers, but Buddha head green is not the best quality blue and white material, but the best quality blue glaze.

High-quality Jilan glaze is the best glaze extracted from Huiqing material.

This kind of best-quality Ji blue glaze is generally called Buddha's head green. It is purple in blue and very beautiful, so it is naturally monopolized by official kilns.

Chen Wenzhe made a lot of antique porcelain before, but now he imitates blue and white porcelain, but through blue and white, he can touch more other porcelain.

Among them, Ji blue glaze is the most important one.

Among the monochromatic glazes, the blue glazed porcelain, as long as it is made well enough, will be handed down to the present as a national treasure.

Now that we have researched Huiqing material and Shi Ziqing, it is natural to make a good mixture.

As long as you can make Buddha head green, it is easy to make Jilan glazed porcelain.

Ji blue glaze is well-known in China and is a treasure of my country's traditional porcelain making technology.

Also known as "accumulating blue glaze", "sacrificing blue glaze" and "ji blue glaze".

Ming and Qing blue glazes are commonly called "ji blue", a kind of high temperature lime alkali glaze.

The green body is glazed and fired once at a high temperature of 1280-1300c.

The color is deep, the glaze does not flow or crack, the color tone is uniform, and the color is relatively stable.

Its glaze color is as blue as the deep sea, the glaze surface is uniform, and the color is stable. Later generations call it "Jiqing".

Because of its stable and bright color like gemstones, it is also regarded as the three "top grades" of Xuande color glazed porcelain, juxtaposed with white glaze and red glaze.

The craftsmanship inherits the tradition of the Yuan Dynasty, and the firing continues. The main shapes are sacrificial vessels and display porcelain.

Ji blue glaze was first created in the Yuan Dynasty and has been fired until modern times.

In the early and middle Ming Dynasty, Jilan glaze was mainly used for official sacrificial vessels and furnishing vessels.

This is very similar to yellow glazed porcelain, which is monopolized by the royal family.

In the middle and late Ming Dynasty, some low-quality domestically produced cobalt blue glazed porcelain appeared in folk kilns.

From the mid-Wanli period to the end of the Chongzhen Ming Dynasty, no Jilan-glazed porcelain made in official kilns has been found.

The official kilns and folk kilns of the Qing Dynasty continued to make Ji blue glazed porcelain.

However, due to the different cobalt materials, the color of the blue glaze is no longer as beautiful as that of Su materials and Huiqing materials in the early and middle Ming Dynasty.

Therefore, as long as it is before the Qing Dynasty, especially the blue-glazed porcelain before the mid-Ming Dynasty, the market value is very high.

Of course, this does not mean that the value of Jilan glaze in Qing Dynasty is low.

Because as long as it is an official kiln, the value is not low.

Especially in the three dynasties of Qing Dynasty, Ji blue glaze can even be said to be the best!

At an auction in 2011, a chrysanthemum petal-shaped flower pot with blue glaze from the Yongzheng period of the Qing Dynasty was sold for a sky-high price of 500 million.

A pair of sacrificial ear statues with gold and folded branches and flowers from the Qianlong Dynasty was sold at an auction for nearly 900 million yuan.

From this we can see the charm and value of blue-glazed porcelain. In terms of age, the blue-glazed porcelain of the Qing Dynasty was after the Yuan and Ming Dynasties, but its quality was not inferior, and even surpassed.

Porcelain with such a high value is naturally liked by people nowadays.

But what is Ji blue glaze?There are really many people who don't understand this.

If you want to know what is Jilan glaze, you must first understand what is Jilan.

If there is a particularly dark blue porcelain in the house of a Tibetan friend, then you can doubt whether it is Ji blue glazed porcelain.

Jilan glaze is also called Jiqing, also known as Jilan glaze and sacrificial blue glaze.

Why there are so many names, because there is a reason.

For example, it is called Jiqing, which is caused by the unclear concept of blue, blue and green in ancient times.

The characteristics of craftsmanship are different in different eras, even if it is the same color, even the names are different.

Ji Lanyou's life experience is actually a mystery.

Because there are many related documents that say that it appeared in the Northern Song Dynasty.

But it is now agreed that it appeared in the Yuan Dynasty.

The Yuan Dynasty developed high-temperature blue-glazed porcelain, which was the predecessor of the later Ji-blue glaze.

From the Ming Dynasty to the Qing Dynasty, blue-glazed porcelains such as Jilan, Salan, Tianlan, and Peacock Blue gradually appeared.

There are so many types and the glaze colors are beautiful, which is amazing.

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