Not currently on display at the V&A

Furnishing Fabric

1912 (designed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This cotton furnishing fabric was designed and manufactured for Liberty & Co. of London.
It was duplex-printed, a process where the same pattern is roller-printed or screen-printed on to both sides of the fabric, making this design of stems bearing poppies and seed pods completely reversible.

In the 1890s Liberty & Co. achieved international success with their Art Nouveau textile designs, and from 1900 to about 1912 they continued to supply an eager market with modified versions of these furnishing prints. Liberty had most of their fabrics printed by outside firms. They were then sold in the London store as Liberty fabrics, without mention of the designer or manufacturer.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Printed cotton
Brief description
Furnishing fabric, duplex printed by Turnbull and Stockdale for Liberty & Co. Ltd., 1912, British
Physical description
Duplex printed cotton furnishing fabric. White ground with a close repeating pattern of vertical stems with dog roses in shades of green.
Dimensions
  • Width: 37cm
  • Length: 43cm
Production typeMass produced
Marks and inscriptions
Credit line
Given by Liberty & Co.
Object history
This cotton furnishing fabric was designed and manufactured for Liberty & Co., London. Liberty had most of their fabrics printed by outside firms, including G. P. & J. Baker, Alexander Morton and Turnbull & Stockdale. The fabrics were then sold in the London store as Liberty fabrics, without mention of the designer or manufacturer.
Production
Reason For Production: Retail
Subject depicted
Summary
This cotton furnishing fabric was designed and manufactured for Liberty & Co. of London.
It was duplex-printed, a process where the same pattern is roller-printed or screen-printed on to both sides of the fabric, making this design of stems bearing poppies and seed pods completely reversible.

In the 1890s Liberty & Co. achieved international success with their Art Nouveau textile designs, and from 1900 to about 1912 they continued to supply an eager market with modified versions of these furnishing prints. Liberty had most of their fabrics printed by outside firms. They were then sold in the London store as Liberty fabrics, without mention of the designer or manufacturer.
Collection
Accession number
T.324-1976

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Record createdNovember 12, 2003
Record URL
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