Tin-glazed earthenware having an opaque white
glaze with painted
overglaze decoration of metal oxide enamel colour(s) is known as
maiolica. It reached Italy by the mid-15th century. It is frequently prone to flaking and somewhat delicate. The word is also spelt with a
j,
majolica. In contemporary England the use of
maiolica spelt with an
i tends to be restricted to Renaissance Italian maiolica. In the US
majolica spelt with a
j is used for both coloured glazes majolica and tin-glazed. In France and other countries, tin-glazed maiolica developed also as
faience, and in UK and Netherlands as
delftware. In France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Mexico and Portugal, tin-glazed wares are called (), , , ,
talavera, and respectively. Ware dipped (or coated) in tin glaze, set aside to dry, brush-painted on the unfired glaze, then fired. Process requires four separate stages and high skill in painting. File:Hispano-Moresque - Plate - Walters 482111.jpg|Hispano-Moresque maiolica, c. 1450, tin-glazed with lustre decoration,
Moorish Spain. File:Dish MET sf46-85-3s1.jpg|"Earthenware, tin-glaze (Majolica), early 15th century, Italy." Metropolitan Museum NY. File:Assiette Castel Durante Lille 130108.jpg|Tin-glazed Italian Renaissance maiolica, 1550–1570. File:Rouen Musée des Antiquités majolique armoriée.jpg|Tin-glazed majolique armoriée, France, late 16th century. Italian Renaissance
Grotesque style. File:Lisbona, piatto, 1675-99 ca..JPG|Tin-glazed Spanish maiolica, late 17th century. File:GreenPueblaBowlMAPDF.JPG|Tin-glazed 17th century
Talavera, also called
majolica, Mexico. File:Charger (AM 2124-2).jpg|Tin-glazed London Delftware charger, mid-17th century, in imitation of mid-16th century Palissy coloured glazes charger 'La Fecundite'. File:Minton Tin glazed Victoria plate California Collection 01.jpg|Rare tin-glazed Minton 'majolica' Victoria plate, brush-painted decoration on flat surface in Renaissance style, mid-19th century (1853). File:Minton Tin glazed Victoria plate California Collection REVERSE.jpg|Rare tin-glazed Minton 'majolica' Victoria plate, reverse, opaque white tin-glaze. File:Minton tin-glaze Majolica Renaissance style, reverse with date cypher and painted mark 02.jpg|Rare tin-glazed Minton Majolica, mid-19th century (1870), in imitation of Italian Renaissance istoriato style maiolica. File:Vase à décor renaissance.JPG|Tin-glazed faience, Luneville, France, late 19th century. Renaissance style. File:Faience-luneville-saint-clement.jpg|
Tin-glazed faience, fine painted colours on opaque white tin glaze, France. File:Ceramica di Montelupo (riproduzione).JPG|Tin-glazed 20th century maiolica, Italy. ==Majolica types, detail==