Skip to main content
665 results
  • Posset pot. English delftware, circa 1730.
  • Trimeric G protein/adenylate cycl. surf.pot.
  • Pewter chamber pot, marked SUR 22.
  • Example of "pot-lid fracture" in flint.
  • Ancient Egyptian Kohl pot minature pestle and mortar
  • Posset pot, Lambeth delftware, blue and white, 1651
  • Posset pot, delftware, Bristol, early 18th C.
  • Water supply: carrying wate in an earthenware pot
  • Photo of pot of Hazeline Snow (Chinese text)
  • A carved pot (from New Zealand?). Albumen print.
  • Three American colonial black pot-figures, front views
  • Three American colonial black pot-figures, front views
  • A Turkish (?) woman carrying a coffee pot. Gouache.
  • Trim. G protein,complex with RGS4,surf.pot.
  • A plant (Ranunculus species): flowering plant in a pot. Woodcut.
  • Ojuoro plant growing in a native pot. Photograph, c. 1911.
  • Silver feeding cup or small posset pot, by Andrews, 1698.
  • Photo of pot of Hazeline Snow and package (Chinese text)
  • A study in pharmaceutical elegance : Italian drug pot, XVIth Century.
  • A study in pharmaceutical elegance : Italian drug pot, XVIth Century.
  • A study in pharmaceutical elegance : Italian drug pot, XVIth Century.
  • A physician pointing to a chamber pot. Line engraving by R. Nanteuil.
  • American colonial black pot with head attached to handle, view of head
  • A Brahmin holding a pot. Gouache painting on mica by an Indian artist.
  • Hydraulics: a pot filter and a sedimentation trap. Engraving by Mutlow after Blunt.
  • Bernardus Paludanus. Line engraving by H. Bary after Jan van de Velde after H.G. Pot.
  • A street performer holding a small pot upside down. Watercolour by an Indian artist.
  • Umtali, Zimbabwe: two African boys stirring a cooking pot. Photograph by J. Lomas, 1905.
  • A water-pot (hydria), painted with women at their toilet, with Eros. Engraving, 17--.
  • India: the procession of the Sacred Water Pot to avert cholera: the decorative over-sized pot is held aloft between two crowned models; musicians stand to each side. Photograph by Underwood and Underwood, ca. 1900 (?).