Today’s image is of a sherd of Earliest Iron Age pottery with a bright red finish applied to its outer surface. Around 900 BC, in the earliest phase of the Iron Age, a new technique was adopted by potters where vessels were decorated by applying iron-oxide powder as a slip to the outer surfaces.
Like the finger tip decoration that was applied to bronze age on vessels that was shown on VM_365 Day 155, this technique is a skeuomorph, using the inspiration of one decorative form as a reference to create another decorative style. The process evolved with the deliberate intention of emulating the bright colour of freshly made and polished bronze vessels.
The technique was only applied on thin-walled fineware bowls, which were most ike the bronze models. The sherd shown in the image is from a bowl found at Minnis Bay, Birchington which can be dated broadly to around 900 to 600BC .