Tile of "Summer" Kate Greenaway, 1881 The Victoria & Albert Museum |
In the late Nineteenth Century, ceramic wall tiles were considered quite
fashionable and the demand for them grew considerably, especially to be used in conjunction with fireplaces since the new
cast-iron grates that began to appear during this period were specifically
designed to be set with tiles. The tiles
were fitted to metal panels that bolted onto the frame. At the start of this trend, pictorial tiles
with pastoral scenes were especially popular and, often, tiles with series of
different scenes were used.
The
invention of “dust-pressing,” which developed in the 1840s, aided the mass
production of tiles. The process allowed
tiles to be formed by compacting powdered clay under high pressure in a
screw-press. As many as 1,800 tiles a day—of a consistently high quality--could
made on a single press, operated by two people. The result was tiles which were much less
prone to warping than earlier examples.
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