Design
ca. 1940-1955 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
'Waldybags' was the name given to a particular type of luxury handbag sold by the firm H. Wald & Co. after the Second World War. They were characterised by and unusual decorative technique by which minuscule glass beads were applied to painted decoration, creating a glistening, textured effect. These handbags were popular with the British royal family. Although the firm is synonymous with this style of decoration, the decorative technique was in fact developed and executed by Florence Campbell, a Jewish-German immigrant who married a Scottish engineer and moved to England in the 1940s. She expanded her skills in German pen work, a popular past time for young women in Germany, to encompass a range of decorative objects including household items and shoes, as well as bags. The work was initially carried out solely by Mrs Campbell. Later she taught the technique to her niece, Joan Ashley-Biggs, and then the latter's daughter, Margaret Wood, who continued to design and paint Waldybags until the late 1970s.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | This design was intended to be transferred to a handbag painted in a technique that Florence Campbell derived from traditional German penwork. The designwas applied to the handbag by painting in various coloured paints, mixed with an adhesive substance called Instanta. Miniscule clear beads were then applied to the wet paint to create a shimmering textured surface. |
Brief description | A design on paper for a painted handbag by Florence Campbell (c.1886- c.1970) |
Physical description | A painted floral design on paper in the shape of one side of a woman's handbag. The outline of the design is drawn in blue ball-point pen, and the floral decoration is created using coloured adhesive paint to which have been applied miniscule glass beads. The design consists of rows of flowers of various types arranged in a gradual pyramid, with larger flowers at the base tapering to smaller flowers at the top. |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Given by Mrs M. Wood |
Subject depicted | |
Association | |
Summary | 'Waldybags' was the name given to a particular type of luxury handbag sold by the firm H. Wald & Co. after the Second World War. They were characterised by and unusual decorative technique by which minuscule glass beads were applied to painted decoration, creating a glistening, textured effect. These handbags were popular with the British royal family. Although the firm is synonymous with this style of decoration, the decorative technique was in fact developed and executed by Florence Campbell, a Jewish-German immigrant who married a Scottish engineer and moved to England in the 1940s. She expanded her skills in German pen work, a popular past time for young women in Germany, to encompass a range of decorative objects including household items and shoes, as well as bags. The work was initially carried out solely by Mrs Campbell. Later she taught the technique to her niece, Joan Ashley-Biggs, and then the latter's daughter, Margaret Wood, who continued to design and paint Waldybags until the late 1970s. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.13-2014 |
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Record created | November 19, 2013 |
Record URL |
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