Petticoat
1700-1750 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This petticoat is an extraordinary feat of knitting skill unparalleled in any other known collection. We do not know exactly how it was made. It seems too large to have been produced by hand or on a knitting frame. The only other similar garment was a petticoat knitted in a variety of abstract patterns within a diamond-shaped grid. Sold at Christies auction house in 1981, it too dated from the early 18th century and had both Dutch and English connections.
The cream-coloured petticoat is knitted in two-ply wool, with surface decoration of animals, birds and trees. Among the more exotic creatures are an elephant, a lion, an ostrich and a rhinoceros. The motifs are knitted in purl and plain on a background of stocking stitch.
The petticoat is knitted in the round with no seams and has a circumference of over 3 metres at the widest point. Despite the large surface area, the pattern does not repeat.
The cream-coloured petticoat is knitted in two-ply wool, with surface decoration of animals, birds and trees. Among the more exotic creatures are an elephant, a lion, an ostrich and a rhinoceros. The motifs are knitted in purl and plain on a background of stocking stitch.
The petticoat is knitted in the round with no seams and has a circumference of over 3 metres at the widest point. Despite the large surface area, the pattern does not repeat.
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Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Hand knited in two ply wool |
Brief description | Petticoat knit of ivory wool, possibly Dutch, 1700-1750 |
Physical description | The petticoat is in the form of a very wide, short cylinder of continuous knitting with a non-repeating pattern of a wide variety of animals, birds, insects and plants and one human figure. Knit continuously without seams with all devices made of knit and purl stitches or combinations of the two, with eyelets for the eyes against a ground of stocking stitch. Approximately 2,650 stitches were cast on and worked in a gauge of twenty-two stitches per inch. |
Dimensions |
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Production type | Unique |
Gallery label |
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Credit line | Bequeathed by Lt. Col. G. B. Croft-Lyons FSA |
Historical context | An extraordinary feat of knitting skill, this object is unparalleled in any other known collection. The exact means by which it was created are not clear, seeming too large for either hand or frame production. The only other similar garment sold at Christies in 1981, a petticoat knitted in a variety of abstract patterns within a diamond shaped grid. It too dated from the early 18th century and had both Dutch and English connections. |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This petticoat is an extraordinary feat of knitting skill unparalleled in any other known collection. We do not know exactly how it was made. It seems too large to have been produced by hand or on a knitting frame. The only other similar garment was a petticoat knitted in a variety of abstract patterns within a diamond-shaped grid. Sold at Christies auction house in 1981, it too dated from the early 18th century and had both Dutch and English connections. The cream-coloured petticoat is knitted in two-ply wool, with surface decoration of animals, birds and trees. Among the more exotic creatures are an elephant, a lion, an ostrich and a rhinoceros. The motifs are knitted in purl and plain on a background of stocking stitch. The petticoat is knitted in the round with no seams and has a circumference of over 3 metres at the widest point. Despite the large surface area, the pattern does not repeat. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | T.177-1926 |
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Record created | February 16, 1999 |
Record URL |
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