Thus, although the artificial porcelain of France is invariably called pate tendre, or soft porcelain, it is not improperly classed under translucent hard-pastes.
This is altogether exceptional in the case of pate tendre.
But though she obtained, as the reward of her surrender of this wish, a little tea-service of old Sevres pate tendre, she kept her wish at the bottom of her heart, as if written on tablets.
The soft porcelain, or pate tendre, can be made without the admixture of the clay called by the Chinese kaolin.
European porcelains are known as hard and soft, the pate dure and pate tendre of the French.
The production of soft porcelain, or pate tendre, continued at Sevres, in company with that of the pate dure, until 1804.
The pate tendre is also soft in another sense, being unable to bear so great a degree of heat in the furnace as hard porcelain.
The Prince-Protector died in 1794, but the production of pate tendre ceased before that time.
Soft paste, which has been discontinued for many years in every other fabrique in France, is still made at both places, and they consequently produce the closest imitations of old Sevres pate tendre.
The porcelain (pate tendre) of this time was like that of St. Cloud, but in the Delft style, the favourite ornamentation being Chinese designs.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "pate tendre" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.