Without more information about your question, it is hard to be clear about why potteries don't make pottery. If you are referring to a pottery wheel not correctly producing pottery, there may be an issue with the wheel's functioning or the material being used. The clay may not be the right consistency or of the right composition.
sachin
I found this site for you:A Pottery is a facility of any size, from a modest studio to an industrialized factory, where pottery is made. Where resources are available - raw materials, workers, transportation - groups of potteries may exist. Due to the large number of pottery factories, or colloquially 'Pot Banks', the City of Stoke-on-Trent in England became known as The Potteries; one of the first industrial cities of the modern era where as early as 1785 200 pottery manufacturers employed 20,000 workers. The Potters is the nickname of the local football club, Stoke City F.C.. The same name is used for sports teams in the one-time "Pottery Capital of the World," East Liverpool, Ohio.* http://schools-wikipedia.org/wp/p/Pottery.htm
the diamond stamp is the earliest HaegerPottery mark. it was used in the 1910's thru the 1920's. a green, diamond shaped sticker with the words "haeger potteries" and "dundee, illinois" replaced the diamond stamp.
a kiln or perhaps a pottery wheel. But much pottery is cast in a mould, then freed and fired.
they would make it out of clay like today but they don't have technolongy
B. L. Dollen has written: 'Collector's encyclopedia of Red Wing art pottery' -- subject(s): American Art pottery, Art pottery, Art pottery, American, Catalogs, Collectors and collecting, Red Wing Potteries 'Redwing Art Pottery' -- subject(s): American Art pottery, Art pottery, American, Catalogs, Collectors and collecting, Red Wing Potteries
sachin
Kathy M. McKimmie has written: 'Clay times three' -- subject(s): American Pottery, Brown County Hills Pottery (Nashville, Ind.), Brown County Pottery (Nashville, Ind.), Martz Potteries (Nashville, Ind.), History
Several potteries are located along NC Hwy 705 or its side roads, prompting the state to designate Hwy 705 as the official "NC Pottery Highway".Taken from http://www.discoverseagrove.com
The Wintu Tribe used pottery for trading. The Wintu Tribe were active traders, even more so than other Native American tribes.
I found this site for you:A Pottery is a facility of any size, from a modest studio to an industrialized factory, where pottery is made. Where resources are available - raw materials, workers, transportation - groups of potteries may exist. Due to the large number of pottery factories, or colloquially 'Pot Banks', the City of Stoke-on-Trent in England became known as The Potteries; one of the first industrial cities of the modern era where as early as 1785 200 pottery manufacturers employed 20,000 workers. The Potters is the nickname of the local football club, Stoke City F.C.. The same name is used for sports teams in the one-time "Pottery Capital of the World," East Liverpool, Ohio.* http://schools-wikipedia.org/wp/p/Pottery.htm
did Pakistan make pottery
the diamond stamp is the earliest HaegerPottery mark. it was used in the 1910's thru the 1920's. a green, diamond shaped sticker with the words "haeger potteries" and "dundee, illinois" replaced the diamond stamp.
Yes the paleo indians did make pottery from the ground.
The National Potteries Corporation (NAPCO) is in Bedford, Ohio near Cleveland. They've been in business since 1938. They have produced glassware as well as pottery.
Certain types of clay were (and still are) used to make pottery.
They made pottery faster by inventing the pottery wheel.