Chaozhou colored porcelain is a porcelain painting art created by Chaozhou artists in the late Qing Dynasty using new pigments, combining traditional overglaze painting art and integrating Chinese painting techniques. Its characteristics are full composition, bright colors, clear layers, smooth lines, beautiful and vivid, and elegant style. Chaozhou has produced porcelain since the Tang and Song Dynasties. The Song Dynasty Bijiashan Kiln porcelain has techniques such as engraving, colored flowers, piled flowers and underglaze decoration techniques. The Ming Dynasty was the development period of blue and white porcelain. Pastel was popular in the early Qing Dynasty. In the late Tongzhi period (1874), Gongchenghe, Yongli, Heshun and other companies in Fengxi Porcelain District were engaged in porcelain painting operations. In the second year of the Xuantong period of the Qing Dynasty (1910), Chaozhou colored porcelain artists Liao Jiqiu, Xu Yunqiu, Xie Ziting and others, Chaocai works, 1.2-foot "Hundred Birds Paying Homage to the Phoenix" Four Seasons Plate and overglaze painted figure plates and other porcelains participated in the Nanyang Industrial Exposition in Nanjing and the Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, USA, and received high praise. In the 1980s, Chaozhou colored porcelain was exported to more than 70 countries and regions, and the export volume accounted for more than 60% of the Shantou port. The "300 Pieces of Tianqiu Vase with Peony Flowers and Birds" won the gold medal at the Leipzig International Fair. Chaozhou colored colored porcelain products have also won the Gold Cup and Silver Cup Awards of the China Arts and Crafts Hundred Flowers Awards, and have won provincial and ministerial awards for many years, and are well-known both at home and abroad. In 2014, the Chaozhou colored porcelain firing technique was selected into the fourth batch of national intangible cultural heritage list.