Showing all 5 results
Bowl, made after examples from the Iron Age. This kind of bowl mainly occurs in the Middle Iron Age (475-250 BC). This bowl is decorated with an applied staff band with nail impressions.
Pot with comb-pattern.
Pottery has been around since the Neolithic, more than 7000 years ago. For a long time this was formed by hand and no turntable was involved. Various techniques were used to make pots by hand, such as by joining rolls or sheets of clay together. In every period and every culture, the pottery had specific characteristics.
This vase is a reference to hand-formed pottery with comb-pattern.
This flower pot looks like it has been handmade and has been tainted with clay to create a rough surface. It refers to pots that were made in the Iron Age.
Fibula based on Iron Age examples.
A fibula is a cloak pin. They were used before the introduction of the button.
This candle holder is a reference to the bossed beaker. These are glass beakers that occur in late 16th-century or 17th-century archaeological contexts. The wall of the bossed beaker is decorated with a relief pattern in the form of drops, tears, diamonds, warts or … bosses. Just like with this candle holder.
BE0816802356
© 2023 Archaeologymeetsdesign.com. All Rights Reserved.
Design by WPDesign.be