What is Imari pattern?
Keeping this in consideration, how can you tell real Imari?
Imari porcelain often features intricate designs of animals, flowers, patterns or symbolic objects. Examine the piece for signs of age. General signs of age in a piece of porcelain include tiny, cracklike marks called crackling, deterioration or scratching of the glaze, and faded or discolored design.
Similarly, you may ask, how do you identify Imari porcelain?
You can identify Chinese Imari by its brighter white and more purple-toned blue. The red over-glaze is also thinner and closer to orange than in Japanese pieces. Chinese Imari is generally more finely potted than Japanese, with a very even glaze.
However, some antique Japanese porcelain continues to demand high prices, such as a Nabeshima dish or a rare Kakiemon bowl, ranging in price from $15,000 to $60,000. It has become customary for some collectors to call Japanese blue and white porcelain wares, Arita, and the more colorful wares Imari or Kakiemon.