Dress Fabric thumbnail 1
Dress Fabric thumbnail 2
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Dress Fabric

ca. 1750-1755 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Fashionable men and women displayed their taste in the fine fabrics they chose for their clothes. Until the later 17th century most silks were imported. But a silk-weaving industry developed in England, centred around Spitalfields in London, which grew increasingly successful between 1700 and 1760. Huguenot refugee families, contributing technical and business skills, played an integral part in its development.

Spitalfields weavers produced plain and patterned fabrics. Designs changed season by season, influenced by French fashions but developing a distinctive English style.

This fabric, woven in Spitalfields, is a brocaded silk, and was intended for ladies' gowns. The technique of brocading allowed different colours to be introduced into the pattern of a fabric in specific, sometimes very small areas. It was a more laborious process for the weaver than using patterning wefts running from selvedge to selvedge, but the resulting effect could be much more varied and lively. The extensive use of silver-gilt thread here indicates that it would have been a relatively expensive silk.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Brocaded silk in silks and silver-gilt threads
Brief description
Dress fabric of brocaded silk in coloured silks and silver-gilt threads, Spitalfields, London, ca. 1750-1755
Physical description
Dress fabric of brocaded silk in coloured silks and silver-gilt threads. White ground with a design in white of vertical zig zag band composed of scalloped scrolls. Along one side of this band is a parallel zig zag in gilt thread. A line zig zagging in the opposite direction is formed by sprays of brightly coloured flowers. The ground is powdered with small sprays in white and with gilt metal touches.
Dimensions
  • Length: 27in
  • Width: 20.5in
taken from register; not checked on object
Summary
Fashionable men and women displayed their taste in the fine fabrics they chose for their clothes. Until the later 17th century most silks were imported. But a silk-weaving industry developed in England, centred around Spitalfields in London, which grew increasingly successful between 1700 and 1760. Huguenot refugee families, contributing technical and business skills, played an integral part in its development.

Spitalfields weavers produced plain and patterned fabrics. Designs changed season by season, influenced by French fashions but developing a distinctive English style.

This fabric, woven in Spitalfields, is a brocaded silk, and was intended for ladies' gowns. The technique of brocading allowed different colours to be introduced into the pattern of a fabric in specific, sometimes very small areas. It was a more laborious process for the weaver than using patterning wefts running from selvedge to selvedge, but the resulting effect could be much more varied and lively. The extensive use of silver-gilt thread here indicates that it would have been a relatively expensive silk.
Associated object
CIRC.513-1931 (Design)
Collection
Accession number
CIRC.513-1931

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Record createdApril 17, 2009
Record URL
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