Kuznetsov porcelain was widely known throughout Russia in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The products of the plant were diverse and designed for a wide consumer. The huge company had branches throughout the country and was a supplier of most European royal courts. The porcelain factory was founded in 1832 by an Old Believer peasant Kuznetsov Terenty Yakovlevich.
A part of the service that was used in Pustozersk in the family of Semyon Grigorievich Kozhevin and Klavdia Petrovna Kozhevina takes a prominent place in the exposition of the Pustozersk Museum-Reserve. The service consists of a milk jug (a container for milk or cream), a sugar bowl (a container for storing sugar) and a slop-basin (a container for rinsing glasses and cups and discarding tea brew; it was believed that used tea leaves spoil the highly valued taste of tea). For a long time, the service was kept in the family of the eldest son of the Kogevins as a family heirloom.