{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/presentation/2/context.json","@type":"sc:Manifest","@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/winterthur/iiif/136d9b9b-3b66-4f5c-a540-b62a370b939c/manifest","label":"Col216_71x166-54","metadata":[{"label":"Title","value":"Transfer print"},{"label":"Rights","value":["No Copyright - United States"]},{"label":"Finding Aid","value":"http://findingaid.winterthur.org/html/HTML_Finding_Aids/COL0216.htm"},{"label":"Identifier","value":"Col. 216, Acc. 71x166.54"},{"label":"Source Collection","value":["William Gallimore Transfer Print Collection (Col. 216)"]},{"label":"Subjects","value":["Staffordshire pottery","Transfer-printing"]},{"label":"Language","value":["English"]},{"label":"Format","value":["manuscript"]},{"label":"Place","value":"Staffordshire, England"},{"label":"Creator","value":"William Gallimore"},{"label":"Date (EDTF)","value":"D:00 M:00 Y:1820 - D:00 M:00 Y:1840"},{"label":"Description","value":"Series of six scenes. Clockwise from upper left: hyena lurks near buildings; tiger emerges from hiding, buildings among trees; lion devouring kill wards off skulking tiger.\nTwo deer in meadow, ruins & building; man in furs and boots harnesses a reindeer, huts; two-humped camel."},{"label":"Biographical Note","value":"William Gallimore (1807?-1891) was a designer and engraver.  He did considerable work for the Wedgwoods, Enoch Wood, John Alcock, John Ridgeway, and other English potters.  He died in 1891 in Trenton, New Jersey  at the home of his son, William W. Gallimore, who was also in the pottery business, as were his children.\n\nThe collection consists mainly of transfer prints and proofs from cooper plates engraved by Gallimore and others, together with some original drawings from which the engravings were made, for potteries in Staffordshire, England.  Pastoral scenes, exotic landscapes, elaborate architecture, genre scenes, floral and geometric designs, and miscellaneous scenes are represented. \n\nTransfer-printed designs on thin tissue paper were used to apply decoration to pottery, a method popular in England especially in the 19th century. After the colored design was transferred to the pottery the tissue paper was washed away, hence, the tissue paper prints in this collection were never applied and offer us a rare glimpse of the process."}],"description":"Transfer print","sequences":[{"@type":"sc:Sequence","canvases":[{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/winterthur/iiif/136d9b9b-3b66-4f5c-a540-b62a370b939c/canvas/_1","@type":"sc:Canvas","label":"71x166.54","height":3429,"width":3155,"images":[{"@type":"oa:Annotation","motivation":"sc:painting","resource":{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/winterthur/iiif/a21d6daa-6f86-4a04-a1db-b86da84c0f0d/full/full/0/default.jpg","@type":"dctypes:Image","format":"image/jpeg","service":{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/context.json","@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/winterthur/iiif/a21d6daa-6f86-4a04-a1db-b86da84c0f0d","profile":"http://iiif.io/api/image/2/level2.json","tiles":[{"width":1024,"scaleFactors":[1,2,4]}]},"height":3429,"width":3155},"on":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/winterthur/iiif/136d9b9b-3b66-4f5c-a540-b62a370b939c/canvas/_1","metadata":[]}],"thumbnail":{"@id":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/winterthur/iiif/a21d6daa-6f86-4a04-a1db-b86da84c0f0d/full/500,500/0/default.jpg","@type":"dctypes:Image","height":500,"width":500}}]}],"thumbnail":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/winterthur/iiif/a21d6daa-6f86-4a04-a1db-b86da84c0f0d/full/300,300/0/default.jpg","logo":"https://iiif.quartexcollections.com/winterthur/iiif/logo"}