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Not currently on display at the V&A

Strawberry Thief

Printing Block
1883 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Printing block


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleStrawberry Thief
Materials and techniques
carved wood
Brief description
Printing block, 'Strawberry Thief', designed by William Morris for Stead McAlpin, England, 1883.
Physical description
Printing block
Dimensions
  • Width: 465mm
  • Height: 305mm
  • Depth: 50mm
  • Weight: 2.17kg
Credit line
Given by John Lewis & Co. Ltd.
Object history
Acquired by the museum in 1981 from Stead and McAlpin & Co. Ltd.
Stead and McAlpin acquired these from Morris & Co. in 1940, along with the full range of Morris & Co. print blocks for textile designs. Stead and McAlpin produced Morris & Co. printed textiles for various companies including Liberty, Cavendish Textiles and the John Lewis Partnership, by whom Stead & McAlpin were eventually taken over by.

T.15: to C-1981 are the blocks used by Morris & Co. for indigo discharge printing. During this process, the whole cloth is dipped in a vat of indigo dye, then washed and left to dry. Solvent-coated print blocks would then be used to pick out sections of both light blue, and other colours, from the dark blue cloth. A half solution of solvent is used for light blue/ green, full strength for red and yellow (to make the section completely white first)

Morris’s preferred technique for printing red was to print mordant onto the cloth in the right places, then dip it completely in a vat of madder. The madder would only fix to the cloth in areas with mordant- the rest would wash out. The process would then be repeated with weld (yellow). This was a lengthy process of several days. It is probable that the firm quickly switched over to surface printing the madder and weld directly onto the cloth- in that order- using the same blocks.

The original blocks were cut in pear wood in 1883. Because this is a soft wood these will have been replaced by Morris & Co. as they wore out. Precise dating of the individual blocks is hard, but it is likely that those with metal parts are more recent.
Collection
Accession number
T.15A-1981

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Record createdSeptember 7, 2018
Record URL
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