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Smock

1630-1660 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is a rare example of a 17th-century linen garment. The motifs of its decoration are not the roses, carnations, borage, etc, so typical of contemporary English textiles, but lotus and palmate motifs characteristic of Italian and Ottoman silks. The embroidery is entirely in chain stitch in unbleached silk thread, and the seams are backstitched with silk thread. The seams are worked with button-hole insertion stitch in silk and there is a button-hole picot edging around the hem, neck and wrists.

From the early 16th century until the 1630s, Portugal had trading posts in Bengal and imported textiles including embroideries in yellow silk on cotton. By the mid-16th century, Lisbon was producing needlework using linen instead of cotton. Initially, the designs copied Indian embroideries, but soon began incorporating other influences from Islamic and European art. There are a several embroidered linen quilts in the Indo-Portuguese style in museum collections. Garments are rarer; the V&A has a cloak, T.105-1913, and part of a cloak, 1016-1877. The Museu Nacionale de Lisboa, has a linen alb (15988 MNT) of slightly different shape, but embroidered in a comparable manner.

The garment is T-shaped, with diagonal side gores, a round neck and and no cuffs at the wrists. It may have been made in Lisbon as a camisa mourisca (Moorish-style smock) and worn in England as a woman’s night smock.

Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Linen, linen thread, unbleached silk thread, wooden button core; hand-sewn and hand-embroidered
Brief description
Woman's smock of linen, Portuguese, c1630-1660, with pale yellow silk embroidery in chainstitch.
Physical description
This smock is a T-shaped garment wider at the hem than the shoulders, with long, open sleeves, a round neck with single button fastening. The smock is embroidered at the hem, sleeve, ends and neck in palmate and lotus motifs, with embroidered insertion seams and an embroidered picot edging.
Dimensions
  • Widest part of hem width: 115.5cm
  • Widest part of hem width: 45.5in
  • Sleeves outspread width: 137.8cm
  • Sleeves outspread width: 54.5in
  • Shoulder to hem length: 120.5cm
Production typeUnique
Credit line
Given by Judy Cunnington in memory of her mother Constance Periam Glover (née Elwes)
Object history
Descended to the donor, through the maternal side of her family, from the original owner, Elizabeth Periam of Butleigh Somerset in the 1650s
Summary
This is a rare example of a 17th-century linen garment. The motifs of its decoration are not the roses, carnations, borage, etc, so typical of contemporary English textiles, but lotus and palmate motifs characteristic of Italian and Ottoman silks. The embroidery is entirely in chain stitch in unbleached silk thread, and the seams are backstitched with silk thread. The seams are worked with button-hole insertion stitch in silk and there is a button-hole picot edging around the hem, neck and wrists.

From the early 16th century until the 1630s, Portugal had trading posts in Bengal and imported textiles including embroideries in yellow silk on cotton. By the mid-16th century, Lisbon was producing needlework using linen instead of cotton. Initially, the designs copied Indian embroideries, but soon began incorporating other influences from Islamic and European art. There are a several embroidered linen quilts in the Indo-Portuguese style in museum collections. Garments are rarer; the V&A has a cloak, T.105-1913, and part of a cloak, 1016-1877. The Museu Nacionale de Lisboa, has a linen alb (15988 MNT) of slightly different shape, but embroidered in a comparable manner.

The garment is T-shaped, with diagonal side gores, a round neck and and no cuffs at the wrists. It may have been made in Lisbon as a camisa mourisca (Moorish-style smock) and worn in England as a woman’s night smock.

Associated objects
Collection
Accession number
T.11-2014

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Record createdNovember 18, 2013
Record URL
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