(vii) Very curious large tiles with green glaze and impressed designs, some with 2 knights tilting (H79).
(viii) A broken wall-tile with an elaborate canopy design like the Malvern series (WARD, H79).

Cox (CD79) lists some of the armorial patterns by family.

Roof tiles were recovered in the 1985 rescue dig:  4 complete, fragments of a further 15:  8 made of charnwood slate, 5 of magnesian limestone, 3 of limestone, 1 of mudstone, 1 of sandstone (D1990).  They could have come from any part of the monastery.  30 fragments of ceramic roof tile, possibly from the south range roof, were also found (D1990).

The rescue dig also found 507 complete floor tiles ‘and over 58 kilos of fragments – the equivalent by weight of a further 116 complete tiles’.  They were of 3 kinds:  counter-relief (21%), 2 colour (40%) and plain glazed (30%).  There were 15 types of design.  They date from the late 14th or 15th century (D1990).

‘… to those tiles from Dale, now in the collections of the British Museum’! (D1990).

A full description of the manufacture is in D1990.