high a circular bowl painted in a similar palette with a seated lady among insects and sprigs of flowers, the interior with a flower spray - 14.5cm. Hartley Greens / Leeds Pottery Dinnerware: Hunslet add-to-cart 29803417075809 Default Title 99.99 ///shopifycloud/shopify/assets/no-image-2048-5e88c1b20e087fb7bbe9a3771824e743c244f437e4f8ba93bbf7b11b53f7824c. A Leeds creamware baluster milk jug with entwined ribbed handle, painted in a bright palette with an Oriental boy in a fenced garden, circa 1775 (rim chip) - 12.5cm. The commercial success and outstanding quality of the Leeds product meant that in time all Creamware came to be popularly known as Leedsware. Creamware was perfect for making the elegant and highly decorative tableware in demand in the Georgian age. Hartley Greens & Co produced several kinds of pottery but was particularly famous for its Creamware, a new type of earthenware made from white Cornish clay combined with a translucent glaze to produce its characteristic pale cream color. rapid expansion followed and by 1790, the Pottery products were exported throughout Europe and as far afield as Russia and America. 4009105096801 Hunslet Teapot 99.99 ///s/files/1/0252/3466/9665/products/hglp5601.jpg?v=1566808944 ///s/files/1/0252/3466/9665/products/hglp5601_large.jpg?v=1566808944 USD OutOfStock Dinnerware 169381462113 All Products 140683214945 Hunslet Originally founded in Hunslet, a village just outside Leeds, around 1756, Leeds Pottery was owned by members of two families, both called Green, who were then joined by a Lancashire businessman, William Hartley, giving the company the name under which it became famous.