-
Suppliers to
foodservice operators are
foodservice distributors, who
provide small wares (kitchen utensils) and foods. Some
companies manufacture products in...
- most
likely it was some type of
fabric or ****orted
small ware. A
haberdasher would retail small wares, the
goods of the pedlar,
while a
mercer would specialize...
-
haberdashers were
known to
exist in London,
while grocers sold "miscellaneous
small wares as well as ****es and medicines." However,
these shops were primitive...
- its
wares were
marked Doulton & Co., then from 1901, when a
royal warrant was given,
Royal Doulton. It
always made some more
decorative wares, initially...
- from
several parts of the world,
including many
types of
European painted wares,
often produced as
cheaper versions of
porcelain styles.
English generally...
-
temperatures to give them a hard and
durable form. The
place where such
wares are made by a
potter is also
called a
pottery (plural potteries). The definition...
- and
later to
North America between the 16th and the 20th century.
Whether wares made for non-Western
markets are
covered by the term
depends on context...
- silica,
small amounts of lime and soda, and a colorant,
typically copper. The
material was used to make beads, tiles, figurines, and
small wares. Several...
- and
haberdashers were
known to
exist and
grocers sold "miscellaneous
small wares as well as ****es and medicines". Fish and
other perishables were sold...
- now
often use "red
gloss wares" or "red slip
wares", both to
avoid these issues of definition, and also
because many
other wares of the
Roman period share...