Coventry Town Ribbon
Ribbon
1850-1851 (made)
1850-1851 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Although in the style of a traditional dress or bonnet ribbon, this silk ribbon was woven to demonstrate the technical skills of the manufacturer rather than for actual use. The minute detail and realism of the floral design made this a veritable tour de force of jacquard weaving, fully exploiting the potential of the process.
The Coventry manufacturer of the ribbon is not known, but it is said to have been designed by M. Clack, a pupil of Coventry School of Art, and the pattern drafted (transferred on to a working technical graph, or point paper) by R. Barton. Its successful appearance at the Great Exhibition of 1851 was a great honour for Coventry, which had a large and successful local industry famous for woven silk ribbons, trimmings, small pictures, bookmarks and other keepsakes.
This ribbon was selected for illustration in the Art Journal Illustrated Catalogue of the Great Exhibition (page 13).
The Coventry manufacturer of the ribbon is not known, but it is said to have been designed by M. Clack, a pupil of Coventry School of Art, and the pattern drafted (transferred on to a working technical graph, or point paper) by R. Barton. Its successful appearance at the Great Exhibition of 1851 was a great honour for Coventry, which had a large and successful local industry famous for woven silk ribbons, trimmings, small pictures, bookmarks and other keepsakes.
This ribbon was selected for illustration in the Art Journal Illustrated Catalogue of the Great Exhibition (page 13).
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Coventry Town Ribbon (popular title) |
Materials and techniques | Jacquard-woven silk |
Brief description | Jacquard-woven silk ribbon 'Coventry Town Ribbon', designed by M. Clack, Coventry, 1850-1851 |
Physical description | Jacquard-woven silk ribbon in black and with floral pattern. |
Dimensions |
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Gallery label | British Galleries:
These ribbons were shown at the Great Exhibition of 1851 to demonstrate the complexity of design that could be woven by the jacquard process. The Exhibition catalogue boasted that 10,000 jacquard cards had to be cut and 24,000 cords lifted during weaving. Here, the threads on the reverse of one ribbon can be compared with the surface pattern on another. The ribbons were judged so successful that the type became known as the Coventry 'Town Ribbon'.(27/03/2003) |
Summary | Although in the style of a traditional dress or bonnet ribbon, this silk ribbon was woven to demonstrate the technical skills of the manufacturer rather than for actual use. The minute detail and realism of the floral design made this a veritable tour de force of jacquard weaving, fully exploiting the potential of the process. The Coventry manufacturer of the ribbon is not known, but it is said to have been designed by M. Clack, a pupil of Coventry School of Art, and the pattern drafted (transferred on to a working technical graph, or point paper) by R. Barton. Its successful appearance at the Great Exhibition of 1851 was a great honour for Coventry, which had a large and successful local industry famous for woven silk ribbons, trimmings, small pictures, bookmarks and other keepsakes. This ribbon was selected for illustration in the Art Journal Illustrated Catalogue of the Great Exhibition (page 13). |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | AP.394:2 |
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Record created | March 27, 2003 |
Record URL |
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