-
Slip
unknown - Enlarge image
Slip
- Place of origin:
England, Great Britain (made)
- Date:
ca. 1600 (made)
- Artist/Maker:
unknown (production)
- Materials and Techniques:
Canvas ground, embroidered with silk in tent stitch
- Museum number:
T.47-1972
- Gallery location:
In store
This slip, one of a small group, depicts a stem of cornflowers. Slips were small, usually floral motifs drawn onto canvas, then embroidered and cut out. They would be applied to a rich backing fabric such as velvet or satin. They were used in various types of furnishing, particularly bed hangings. It was more manageable for the domestic embroiderer to work a small piece of canvas that could be held in the hand than to tackle a large embroidery in a single piece. It was also easier, if necessary, to detach the slips and reapply them to another backing.
Two manuscript notes in the V&A relate to the commissioning of this and a group of other slips. They were apparently written by Anne Sydney, daughter of Sir William Sydney of Penshurst, Kent, who married Sir William Fitzwilliam (1526-1599). They seem to indicate that the slips were worked to commission, but almost certainly by household servants, Mrs Fisher and Mrs Lyell, rather than in a workshop.

