This post is especially for those who bought my book on the Crown Ducal snow glaze patterns. I always intended to provide an update should any new material come to light and this blog provides the easiest place to share it. Thank you to those who purchased the book and to contributors who came forward with new discoveries and information.
1. An unrecorded pattern with the Wincoma lithograph.
 
This was a lucky find on ebay, a couple of items in snow glaze with the Wincoma floral transfer border from the Universal Transfer Company. The two shapes are typical of the shape range used for the Princess commemorative patterns 5268 and 5269, so at the time it was uncertain if this design would be found on a full range of tableware. Then a few months later someone kindly contacted me with pictures of Victory oval shape serving platters, Regent shaped covered serving dishes and some 
There are references in the pattern books for the Wincoma transfer on various tableware shapes, Cotswold, Victory, Queen Anne, Avon  and Regent but no mention of its use with snow glaze. So the pattern number remains unknown but the standard snow glaze backstamp confirms that it would have been designed and made in the 1930s prior to World War II.
2. Examples of pattern 5032 discovered.
These were rather special discoveries for me because pattern 5032 is believed to be the only known tube-lined, snow glaze tableware pattern designed by Charlotte Rhead. And, not only does it tick all those Crown Ducal boxes, the design also employs the decorating technique of sponged slip clay. The coloured centres are not enamel colour but the same material as the tube-lining slip,  sponged onto the plate centres and cup interiors.
Several examples of tea service items in pattern 5032 have now been reported, in blue, green and yellow slip colours. All examples so far have been located in Australia  and New Zealand New Zealand New Zealand 
Edit 28th January 2017
There is new information regarding pattern 5032, please see:
https://rhead-crownducal.blogspot.co.uk/2017/01/snow-glaze-book-update-2.html
Edit 28th January 2017
There is new information regarding pattern 5032, please see:
https://rhead-crownducal.blogspot.co.uk/2017/01/snow-glaze-book-update-2.html
3. Notes on who photographed the Princesses.
In the book I wrote that the lithographs for patterns 5268 and 5269 are derived from photographs by Vandyk. My source of information is the Pottery Gazette, June 1937, page 797, which refers to the photographs used by Crown Ducal and reports, “It is only necessary to add that the portraits are by Vandyke to assure the trade that no effort has been spared to realise the height of perfection as regards the faithfulness of the likenesses”.
I see that in the 2012 Miller’s Collectibles Handbook the photographs are attributed to Marcus Adams. Certainly Marcus Adams took many photographs of Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret Rose, but so did other photographers. The hairstyles of the princesses are distinctive but if one looks through The Royal Collection archives on the Internet their style stayed constant for a couple of years which means that almost any head only portrait from that time will look quite similar to another. I have informed the publishers of Miller’s Collectibles of the error. 
4. Under-glaze and on-glaze versions of the same pattern.
Close inspection of two tea cups in the Nome 
I have on-glaze and under-glaze examples in the Nome Charlottes 
5. Did Charlotte 
 
Surely anyone who handles a Bursley Ware object in pattern TL12 would agree that it has snow glaze. This table lamp has a very smooth glaze finish yet has that silky look and feel similar to the Crown Ducal snow glaze tableware productions that were much smoother than the bumpy texture found on fancies. Perhaps we should not call it snow glaze, but this is typical Charlotte Rhead recycling her favourite motifs and successful styles. In a way this confirms that Charlotte  made snow glaze her own, because I have yet to find evidence that Richardsons 
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Self published, small print run and not distributed to bookshops or Amazon, so no point in waiting for them to turn up there!
- Crown Ducal Snow Glaze Tableware and Decorative Pottery
- by Ian Newton
- Format: A5 paperback , 52 pages
- ISBN 9780957146501
 
 
 Edited 19th March 2019 to remove invalid links.
 






