Not currently on display at the V&A

Hawthorn Berries

Jacket
1993 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The hawthorn leaf motif on this jacket is a feature of Sasha Kagan’s work. So too is the use of different textures, such as the contrast here between the chunky wool background and the soft chenille used for the leaves. These have been worked using the intarsia technique. This involves the knitter using a separate length of yarn for each block of colour across the row, so that the yarns are not carried across the entire row which makes up the motifs.

Sasha Kagan trained as a painter and printmaker before moving to rural Wales. Her knitwear is inspired by the local landscape and by William Morris's Arts and Crafts textile designs. She and her studio assistants hand-knit all her designs using natural yarns.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleHawthorn Berries
Materials and techniques
Hand-knitted wool, chenille, horn and copper
Brief description
Jacket 'Hawthorn Berries' made of hand-knitted wool and multi-coloured chenille, designed by Sasha Kagan, Wales, 1993
Physical description
Jacket made of hand-knitted black wool and multi-coloured chenille leaves and fruit, and with horn and copper buttons from Nepal.
Dimensions
  • Neck to hem length: 74cm
  • Across chest width: 63cm
Tension: 5.5 stitches per inch 2.5 stitches per cm
Gallery label
Sasha Kagan is influenced by her rural surroundings and William Morris's tapestries and furnishing textiles. The oak leaf is a recurring motif in her knitwear. This 'Autumnal' jacket features a sinuous pattern of velvety leaves and three dimensional berries in a muted palette.(1997)
Summary
The hawthorn leaf motif on this jacket is a feature of Sasha Kagan’s work. So too is the use of different textures, such as the contrast here between the chunky wool background and the soft chenille used for the leaves. These have been worked using the intarsia technique. This involves the knitter using a separate length of yarn for each block of colour across the row, so that the yarns are not carried across the entire row which makes up the motifs.

Sasha Kagan trained as a painter and printmaker before moving to rural Wales. Her knitwear is inspired by the local landscape and by William Morris's Arts and Crafts textile designs. She and her studio assistants hand-knit all her designs using natural yarns.
Bibliographic reference
De La Haye, Amy, ed. The Cutting Edge: 50 Years of British Fashion 1947-1997. London: V&A Publications, 1997.
Collection
Accession number
T.167-1997

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Record createdAugust 28, 2003
Record URL
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