it helped people sew and krouchet................ This answer is incorrect very very very incorrect porcelain is glass or china......... not yarn..
it helped people sew and krouchet................ This answer is incorrect very very very incorrect porcelain is glass or china......... not yarn..
Porcelain changed the Chinese life by giving them the opportunity to carry more things, because of the thickness, and how strong porcelain is it can carry a load. Also in buildings, it makes the structures stronger, usually in office buildings and sometimes even houses!
Europe mainly wanted spices, silk, and porcelain.
The appearance of cracks in porcelain is known as crazing. This is when the glaze of the porcelain or ceramic cracks, which does not change the integrity of the item.
Porcelain was introduced to Europe in the early 18th century, with the first successful production occurring in Germany around 1708 by Johann Friedrich Böttger, who developed hard-paste porcelain in Meissen. Prior to that, European knowledge of porcelain came from trade routes, particularly through the Dutch East India Company, which imported Chinese porcelain in the 17th century. The fascination with this fine ceramic prompted European attempts to replicate it, leading to the establishment of porcelain factories across the continent.
Spices and silk an porcelain/china
Porcelain was known as white gold in Europe because the formula for making it proved so elusive for a very long time. The Chinese closely guarded the secret to porcelain manufacture to protect their porcelain industry. The Germans finally figured out the formula and began manufacturing porcelain at Meissen in the 1700's.
harbored spices, silk, and ivory
It made something for the Europeans to trade with.
In comparable crockery, a porcelain piece would be lighter than a piece of stoneware. This is because porcelain items are usually made thinner than stoneware.
the east harbored spices, silk, and ivory.
what was life like fo the common european when absolute monarchs ruled