About 1932 the Hoffman Brick Company in Melbourne expanded its interests and took over a small art-pottery and began to market a range of commercial art-pottery that employed Australian floral and faunal motifs.
This ware was called ‘Mel-rose Australian Ware' and although moulded and thus capable of being economically mass-produced it had some of the qualities of more expensive handmade pottery. Usually coloured green, a fresh clean colour that enjoyed a lasting vogue in the 1930s after the drab browns and ochres of the Depression, some examples exist which have white, pink, grey blue or other more...
Melrose Ware pottery was produced by the Hoffman Brick and Tile Company, which was founded in 1862 in the Melbourne suburb of Brunswick. The company was originally a brick and tile manufacturer, but it began producing pottery in the 1930s during the Great Depression.
Melrose Ware pottery was strongly influenced by the Arts and Crafts movement, which emphasized the value of traditional craftsmanship and the beauty of handcrafted objects. This movement was characterized by a departure from mass production and a return to skilled artisanal work.
They produced a range of pottery items, including vases, jugs, bowls, and tiles and more...
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