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Pillow case

Pillow case

  • Place of origin:

    England, Great Britain (made)

  • Date:

    1600-1700 (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    unknown (production)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Linen, with bobbin-lace insertions and whitework embroidery

  • Museum number:

    T.298-1965

  • Gallery location:

    British Galleries, room 56d, case 6, shelf DR3

  • Download image

Object Type
In the 17th century the fabric used for making into pillow cases and sheets was woven from flax or hemp. Flax made the best quality linen. Such linen, which was sometimes described as 'holland', or 'cambric', after the town of Cambrai, France, one of the original centres of production, was imported from The Netherlands, Flanders (now Belgium) and northern France. Most people would have had bed linen made from locally-grown, spun and bleached flax or hemp, however. Different parts of the plants produced fibres of differing quality, giving a range of sheeting from fine to very coarse and rough.

Materials & Making
This pillowcase is made up from a rectangle of linen folded in half, with the selvedge (side edge of the fabric) at the open end making neat finished edges. The seams are decorated with narrow insertions of bobbin lace and whitework embroidery.

Physical description

Pillow case of plain woven white linen, formed from a rectangle of linen folded in half, with selvedges at the open end, narrow insertions of bobbin lace where the linen is seamed along the one short and one long side; the edges of the linen next to the insertion are further decorated with bands of needleweaving. The initials I W are embroidered in cross stitch in black silk (discoloured to brown).

Place of Origin

England, Great Britain (made)

Date

1600-1700 (made)

Artist/maker

unknown (production)

Materials and Techniques

Linen, with bobbin-lace insertions and whitework embroidery

Marks and inscriptions

IW

Dimensions

Height: 55 cm, Width: 90.3 cm maximum, Depth: 0.1 cm

Descriptive line

Pillow case of white linen decorated with lace insertions and whitework, English, 17th century

Labels and date

British Galleries:
Much of this pillowcase may have been home made. The women of the household would have spun the linen thread and then sent it away for weaving. The woven linen was then cut and sewn at home, where the bobbin lace could also have been made. The initials IW embroidered on this pillowcase (top left) are the owner's. [27/03/2003]

Materials

Linen

Techniques

Whitework; Bobbin lace

Categories

Household objects; British Galleries; Textiles; Embroidery; Lace

Collection code

T&D

Download image
Qr_O10798
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