Daphne Carnegy
Blue & White Delft-inspired 4 Tile Cat, 2015
Johnson Wall Tile Blue & White Porcelain
Made Up Of 4 Seperate Tiles To Create One Image
Interior Wall Tile
Blue & White Illustrations Reproduced On Porcelain Tiles For London Craft Week 2015.
Made Up Of 4 Seperate Tiles To Create One Image
Interior Wall Tile
Blue & White Illustrations Reproduced On Porcelain Tiles For London Craft Week 2015.
20 x 20 x 0.8 cm
CDC8
Copyright The Artist
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Johnson Tiles partnered with ceramic artist Daphne Carnegy and Contemporary Applied Arts to produce these beautiful porcelain tiles. Leading British tile manufacturer Johnson Tiles, based in the heart of the...
Johnson Tiles partnered with ceramic artist Daphne Carnegy and Contemporary Applied Arts to produce these beautiful porcelain tiles. Leading British tile manufacturer Johnson Tiles, based in the heart of the Potteries in Staffordshire worked with Contemporary
Applied Arts and ceramic artist Daphne Carnegy to reproduce a series of her blue and white Delft-inspired designs on tiles that clad the internal and external walls of the pavilion, sited on a pedestrian walkway in Southwark, London.
Each 200x200mm porcelain tile is decorated using Johnson Tiles’ bespoke Artile printing service, which allows any colour or image to be reproduced onto new ceramic or porcelain. The process involves producing digital transfers of the original artwork, in this case the artist’s watercolours, hand applying them to the tiles and then firing them to fuse the images with the glaze layer.
Applied Arts and ceramic artist Daphne Carnegy to reproduce a series of her blue and white Delft-inspired designs on tiles that clad the internal and external walls of the pavilion, sited on a pedestrian walkway in Southwark, London.
Each 200x200mm porcelain tile is decorated using Johnson Tiles’ bespoke Artile printing service, which allows any colour or image to be reproduced onto new ceramic or porcelain. The process involves producing digital transfers of the original artwork, in this case the artist’s watercolours, hand applying them to the tiles and then firing them to fuse the images with the glaze layer.