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Best Transfer Print

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Rankings use category fit, feature coverage, pricing signals, public reception, and recency. Affiliate relationships do not affect scores.

0.0 - 10.0
Best 1 Spode
Spode

Spode is a Staffordshire pottery founded by Josiah Spode in 1770, credited with perfecting bone china and popularising the blue-and-white transfer-printed willow pattern in England.

2 Gien
Gien

Founded in France in 1821, this Gien manufacturer is celebrated for its traditional faience earthenware and iconic decorative plates depicting intricate historical and hunting scenes.

3 Masons Ironstone

Masons Ironstone is a Staffordshire pottery established by Charles James Mason in 1813, notable for patenting ironstone china, a hard, durable white earthenware body widely used for large decorative pieces and tableware.

4 Ridgway Pottery

Founded in Staffordshire in 1792, Ridgway Pottery was a major manufacturer of earthenware and porcelain, highly influential in the early development of multi-color transfer printing.

5 Sunderland Pottery (Garrison Pottery)

Active in 19th-century England, Sunderland's Garrison Pottery is notable for producing distinctive pink lustreware featuring transfer-printed nautical themes and commemorative mottos.

6 Maling Pottery

Maling Pottery was a Newcastle upon Tyne ceramics manufacturer operating from 1817 to 1963, once the largest pottery in the world by output and noted for its lustre-decorated domestic earthenware.

7 Burleigh (Burgess & Leigh)

Burgess & Leigh, trading as Burleigh, is a Staffordshire pottery established in Burslem in 1851, one of the last manufacturers to produce traditional blue-and-white transfer-printed earthenware using original engraved copper plates.

8 Choisy-le-Roi Faience

Founded in France in 1804, Choisy-le-Roi Faience was a notable manufacturer of tin-glazed earthenware, highly regarded in the 19th century for its exceptional Renaissance-revival styles.

9 Adams (William Adams & Sons)

William Adams & Sons was a prominent English pottery manufacturer founded in Tunstall, Staffordshire, in 1779, recognized for producing durable ironstone, jasperware, and earthenware.

10 Crown Ducal (A.G. Richardson)

Established in Tunstall in 1915 by A.G. Richardson, Crown Ducal is best known for its stylish 1930s art pottery and distinctive tubelined designs created by designer Charlotte Rhead.

11 Wood & Sons

Wood & Sons was a major English pottery company established in 1860 in Burslem, Staffordshire, notable for its large-scale production of earthenware, transferware, and hotel wares.

12 Johnson Brothers

Johnson Brothers is a Staffordshire pottery founded in Hanley in 1883 by four brothers, known for producing affordable, durable semi-porcelain tableware exported widely to North America and the Commonwealth.

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