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Scrap - Print Collection

Print Collection

  • Object:

    Scrap

  • Date:

    ca.1890 (printed)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Siegmund Hildesheimer & Co. (printer)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Printed paper

  • Credit Line:

    Given by the British Theatre Museum Association

  • Museum number:

    S.5:15-2008

  • Gallery location:

    In Storage

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Scraps first appeared in the early 19th century as black and white engravings, and were later coloured by hand. By the 1820s they had become more elaborate and sometimes embossed, and within a decade both the printing and embossing processes were automated. They were colour printed by chromolithography, and coated with a gelatine and gum layer to give them a gloss finish. After being embossed they were die-cut and put through a stamping press to cut away the unwanted areas of paper, leaving the individual images connected by small strips, often bearing the name or initials of the maker.

Scraps became extremely popular in Victorian England to be cut out by adults or children and stuck into albums, on to screens, or used for decorating greetings cards. This may have been one of a set of pantomime characters, with Harlequin and Clown.

Physical description

Multicoloured paper scrap of a young girl dancer, balancing on her left leg, her left hand held up to her face, wearing a multicoloured tutu, a low-necked white ruff and with a wreath of flowers in her brown hair.

Date

ca.1890 (printed)

Artist/maker

Siegmund Hildesheimer & Co. (printer)

Materials and Techniques

Printed paper

Dimensions

Height: 4.6 cm irregular, Width: 2.5 cm irregular

Descriptive line

Miniature printed paper scrap of a Columbine figure or girl dancer. Chromolithograph by Siegmund Hildesheimer & Co., ca.1890

Subjects depicted

Columbine

Categories

Entertainment & Leisure

Collection code

T&P

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Qr_O1110906
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