World of Interiors & our Mid-Century Modern v11 Vase
World of Interiors – April 2015 – The Mid-Century Modern v11 Vase by Rye Pottery.
Please click the image above to find out more.
 Since 1793
World of Interiors – April 2015 – The Mid-Century Modern v11 Vase by Rye Pottery.
Please click the image above to find out more.
 These photographs show one of Rye Pottery’s 50s style little vases in GPlan’s latest collection of sofas, designed by Red or Dead founder Wayne Hemmingway. It’s a Mid-Century inspired collection, a period we’re very still proud of in our history, and one highly sought after by our collectors.
Rye Pottery was one of a handful of Ceramics exhibitors chosen to show several pieces in the legendary post-war design hall of fame that was the 1951 Festival of Britain. We’re not sure if G-Plan were there too …
This shape has just been brought back into production and is called the Mid-Century Modern v11 vase, click here to see them.
And now we’ll let the pictures do the talking.
 Some of you will have struggled to find us over the past weeks while we have been having our new website sorted out! We are here and working even if off the radar for a short while, so please contact us if you need us (click here). Meanwhile I am doing my best to put all our pottery back on to this lovely new site! I am sure you will eventually find it simpler to navigate and hopefully full of interesting things about all our Rye Pottery ranges. Update: end of September: with help from our daughter Tabby we have finally sorted out the cut off heads and now have put the complete Canterbury Tales pages up on the website. Please do have a look while we go on looking for all the other pre digital pictures for some of the other pages. We are getting very excited as we work through each group and hope you will enjoy the new-look Rye Pottery as much we as do
During the long damp summer June Woolley who retired in 1998 after 45 years, has been back in the attics peering through our amazing archive, not least the from the Mid Century. The result of all this activity means that we have some really exciting one-offs in the shop – early 1950’s patterns painted by June onto vases and bowls.
So not only are we one of the few country potteries still in existence today who were selected to show in one of the pavilions of the Festival of Britain, here 60 years on are some of those same patterns.