This study has shown why the difficult to make and very expensive black fond was made on Delft black pottery between 1675-1725. This has been done by looking at different sources from the...Show moreThis study has shown why the difficult to make and very expensive black fond was made on Delft black pottery between 1675-1725. This has been done by looking at different sources from the seventeenth century as well as recent studies about this subject. The most recent sources are explaining how Delft black pottery was produced to make pottery that looked like Japanese black lacquerware and Chinese black porcelain. Sources form the seventeenth century are telling us that people in Japan as well as in de Dutch Republic were very fond of and fascinated by the colour black. In Japan black was seen as a gentlemen’s colour, and in Europe it was so rare that only the richest people of the Republic were able to afford black clothing. Because of the costs, the many problems the potters faced when manufacturing Delft black and the old sources, the contemporary ideas about the underlying meaning of this pottery seem too farfetched. Based on other sources from the seventeenth century, such as inventory lists and paintings, research has been done after collecting black objects before and in the years Delft black was made. When looking at the inventories and paintings, a remarkable increase is visible in the number of black objects that people possessed. Besides the increase of these black objects which shows us how fashionable it was around 1700, black was also a formal colour to wear, even when people possessed the coloured clothing that were much newer in fashion. Although Japan did not influence the Republic in their thought about ‘black as a gentlemen’s colour’, in both countries it was a status symbol. The colour black was in fashion in the Dutch Republic, which was the reason for the best potters of Delft to attempt to produce Delft black pottery.Show less