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Reports by the juries on the subjects in the thirty classes into which the exhibition was divided : Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations, 1851
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Appendix A 1.]

IXTO WHICH THE EXHIBITION IS DIVIDED.

XXI

XXIV. Glass.

A. "Window Glass , including Sheet Glass , Crown Glass,

and Coloured Sheet Glass.

1. Crown.

2. Sheet.

3. Brown Plate Glass, silvered and unsilvered.

4. Coloured Sheet, Pot Metal, or flashed.

5. Glass Ventilators.

6. Glass Shades, round, oval, and square.

B. Painted and other kinds of Ornamented Window

Glass.

1. Enamelled. Embossed, Etched, painted white, or co-

loured Window Glass .

2. Painted and Leaded Windows .

. Cast Plate Glass.

1. Bough Plate.

2. Ground and polished, silvered and unsilvered.

3. Pressed Plate.

4. Boiled Plate, white and coloured.

D. Bottle-Glass.

1. Ordinary Bottle-glass, including Moulded Bottles.

2. Medicinal Bottle-glass, including Phials, &c., blown

and moulded, of all kinds and shapes.

3. White Bottle-glass. Crown, Pressed, and Moulded

Bottles.

4. Water-pipes and Tubing.

E. Glass for Chemical and Philosophical Apparatus.

1. Glass for Matrass, Retorts, and other kinds of Chemi-

cal and Philosophical Apparatus.

2. Water-pipes and Tubing.

F. Flint Glass or Crystal, with or without Lead,

white, coloured, and ornamented for TableVases, etc.

1. Blown.

2. Moulded and Pressed.

3. Cut and Engraved.

4 . Beticulated and spun with a variety of colours, in-

crusted, flashed, enamelled of all colours, opales-cent, imitation of Alabaster, gilt, platinised, sil-vered, &c.

5. Glass Mosaic , Millefiori, Aventurinc, and Venetian

Glass Weights, &c.

6. Beads, Imitation Pearls, &c.

7. Chandeliers, Candlesticks , and all Glass Apparatus

for Lamps, Candlesticks , Girandoles, Wall Brackets,with or without drops, &c.

G. Optical Glass, Flint and Crown.

1. Bough I>iscs of Flint and Crown, to make Lenses

for Telescopes, Microscopes, Daguerrotypc andCalotype Apparatus, &c.

2. Flint and Crown, blown or cast in plates for the

Optician.

3. Thin Glass for Microscopes.

4. Befractive Apparatus, Prismatic Lenses for Light-

houses. (See also Class J.)

XXV. Ceramic Manufactures Porcelain , Earthenware , Sec.

A. Porcelain, Hard.

1. Chinese .

2. Japanese .

3. Continental, as Berlin, Meissen, &c.

B. Statuary Porcelain.

1. Statuary.

2. Parian.

3. Carrara.

C. Tender Porcelain.

1. English Porcelain, soft or tender.

2. French , with Silicious body.

D. Stoneware, Glazed and Unglazed.

1. Ironstone, or Stone China, glazed.

2. White Stone body, unglazed.

3. Coloured body, Jasper ,,

4. ,, Egyptian black, unglazed.

5. Bed

6. Cane,

7. Drab,

8. Brownware, with salt glaze. (The Lambeth, Ches-

terfield, and Beauvais manufactures arc includedin this class.)

9. Chemical utensils. (These are made both in Stone-

ware and Hard Porcelain.)

E. Earthenware.

1. White body for Printing, Painting, or Enamelling

in different Colours.

2. Common Cream-colour.

3. Green glazed ware.

4. Bockingham ,,

5. Delft ware.

6. Majolica ware.

7. Mocha and Dipped Ware.

8. Common Lead glazed ditto, for utensils.

9. Coloured body, Turquoise.

10. Drab.

11. Olive.

12. Buff.

13. Cottage brown.

F. Terra Cotta.

1. Vases and Garden-pots.

2. Ornaments for Architecture.

3. Encaustic or Inlaid Tiles.

4. Tesserae of various colours, compressed from pow-

dered clay.

5. Superior Plain Tiles forpavements, ditto ditto.

6. ,, Bricks , ditto ditto.

7. Booting Tiles, ditto, ditto.

8. Chimney Pipes.

9. Common Bricks.

10. Booting Tiles, &c.

G. Ornamented or Decorated.

1. Ornamented on Bisque

Painted by hand.

Printed and transferred in various colours.

2. Ornamented on the glaze.

Painted by hand.

Printed by the press.

Printed by hand.

Gold Lustre.

Silver

Steel

Enamelling in various colours.

Gilding.

II. Productions for Architectural Purposes.

XXVI. Decorative Furniture and Upholstery , includingPaper-hangings , Papier-mache , and Japanned Goods.

A. Decoration generally, including Ecclesiastical

Decoration.

1. Ecclesiastical Decoration generally.

2. Ornamental coloured Decoration , as executed by hand.

3. Imitations of Woods, Marbles , &c., ditto.

4. Relievo Decoration, mechanically produced.

B. Furniture and Ufiiolstery.

1. Cabinetwork, plain.

2. Cabinet Work, carved or ornamental,

3. Marqueterie , inlaid Work, in Woods, &c.

4. Buhl or Metallic inlaid Work.

5. Chairs, Sofas, and Beds , and generally Upholstery.

C. Paper-Hangings.

1. Damask Patterns.

2. Flower Patterns.

3. Flock and Metal Papers,

4. Decorative Paper-hangings by Block-work

5. by any other process.

6. Machine-printed Paper-hangings.

D. Papier-mache, Japanned Goods, Pearl and Tortoise-

shell Work.

1. Papier-mache , japanned, inlaid, and decorated.

2. Papier-mache (not japanned), produced in ornamental

forms for decoration.

3. Japanned Goods in Iron , &c.

4* Pearl and Tortoiseshell Work.

XXVII. Manufactures in Mineral Substances used for Build-ing or Decoration , as in Marble , Slate , Porphyries , Cen.ents,Artificial Stones , fyc.

A. Manufactures in common Stones.

1. For Building, and constructions not strictly decora-

tive.

2. For Decorative purposes.

B. Manufactures in Slate.

1. For Construction.

2. For Decoration.

C. Manufactures in Cemf.nt and Artificial Stone *