The identification should be rendered the easier when it is borne in mind that the early Copenhagen porcelain of the Fournier period is soft paste, whereas the Fürstenberg porcelain is hard paste.
At one time we get a kind of pottery that can be scratched with a knife, at another a ware too hard to be so scratched; the one is called 'soft paste' and the other 'hard paste.
No little science was necessary to find colors that would stand the intense heat necessary for firing this hard paste.
Only a hard paste, or kaolin ware, is acknowledged by experts to be genuine porcelain.
These specimens are mostly of hard paste in the form of bowls, plates, tureens, &c.
Elector of Saxony, for the manufacture of true porcelain, that is, hard paste.
King of Poland and Elector of Saxony, for the manufacture of hard paste, or true porcelain.
The experiments of Tschirnhaus and Boettcher commenced about 1706; to the latter is attributed the invention of hard paste.
This explains why some specimens with Chelsea decoration have a hard paste.
Hard paste cannot be scratched or filed and resists the action of great heat.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "hard paste" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.