Michael's project uses rapid manufacture (RM) and rapid prototyping (RP) with highly innovative ceramic materials, to reproduce an iconic ceramic object, the tureen, from the first Industrial Revolution, in a way that was not possible in the 1800s. The lidded tureen, based on designs from the 1817 Wedgwood Creamware Catalogue, was designed on Rhino 3D software, and is a metaphorical object that demonstrates the benefits of RM and RP, methods of 3D printing using digital data. 'The Wedgwoodn't Project' applies new ceramic materials, developed by a company in France, to convert a fragile RP model into a durable product with the same material properties as conventional ceramics. The materials are non-toxic, food safe, frost, acid and alkali resistant and act as a gas barrier. They can be stained with organic, inorganic or metallic pigments and do not require firing. As RP and RM technology advances and costs fall, there is a vast, untapped creative potential for the application of this technology in both the industrial and independent sectors of ceramics. The benefits are potentially enormous and include the application of high specification ceramic materials to products not normally associated with ceramics, from buildings and street furniture to decorative and functional domestic products through to medical uses. It would also give freedom to independent ceramic designers and artists to produce work without the usual constraints of expensive equipment and the need to acquire material knowledge which often takes many years, giving them the ability to work from anywhere with a broadband connection. It would also provide freedom from the constraints of traditional manufacturing techniques, allowing designers to create forms that were previously impossible or extremely expensive to produce such as customisation of designs, with no retooling costs.