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Not currently on display at the V&A

Sample

1960-1965 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Sample of hand-woven furnishing fabric. Pink homespun orlon.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Homespun orlon
Brief description
Sample of hand-woven furnishing fabric, designed by Dorothy Liebes for Charles Bloom Inc., New York, ca. 1965
Physical description
Sample of hand-woven furnishing fabric. Pink homespun orlon.
Dimensions
  • Width: 49in
  • Length: 108in
Credit line
Given by Miss Dorothy Liebes
Object history
[These four textiles CIRC.268 to 271-1965] "...are 100% Orlon casement fabrics which I designed for Charles Bloom Inc., one of my accounts. They are mass-produced cloths sold in American department stores at a modest price and I included them to show that good design and taste can be designed into mass produced items. The plaids are a new process of Orlon dyeing called cross-dyes. The fibers in the ground sections are different chemically from the fibers used in the plaid bar areas, and the woven fabric is dyed first to pick up only one colour, then re-emersed in the second dye bath, which is absorbed by the second fiber. This is a new and exciting process (also known as Duo-Dye) for mass-production fabrics and is just now becoming widely used here."

(From a letter from Dorothy Liebes to Barbara J Morris, Assistant Keeper of Circulation, dated 21 May 1965)
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.269-1965

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
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