. The Australian flora in applied art. ^m. Vase Decoration, by a Student of the TechnicalCollegfe, Adelaide, (Miss L. H. HOWIE).Fig. 2 7. APPLIED ART. 33 It must be rct^ardcd as a compliment tcj our local Technical Institution thatsuch a firm, with a world-wide reputation for its artistic production, shcndd liaveaccepted design work from an Australian student—a true rendering, indeed,of the Empire spirit, for surely our students can receive no greater acknowledg-ment of their ttcimical talent than this. In speaking of ceramics, it may here be mentioned that the Japanese havealso placed on


. The Australian flora in applied art. ^m. Vase Decoration, by a Student of the TechnicalCollegfe, Adelaide, (Miss L. H. HOWIE).Fig. 2 7. APPLIED ART. 33 It must be rct^ardcd as a compliment tcj our local Technical Institution thatsuch a firm, with a world-wide reputation for its artistic production, shcndd liaveaccepted design work from an Australian student—a true rendering, indeed,of the Empire spirit, for surely our students can receive no greater acknowledg-ment of their ttcimical talent than this. In speaking of ceramics, it may here be mentioned that the Japanese havealso placed on the Sydney market, vases, 6ic., decorated with the specimen illustrated under Fig. can hardly claim artistic merit, but itis of interest, in that the decoration was executed by a Japanese, these speci-mens of china being exported from Japan to Australia. It shows that even in that land of Chrysanthemums—we might almost sayworship—the artists have turned to the Waratah for inspiration in ornamenta-tion. At the Techno


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectdecorationandornamen