Furnishing Fabric
ca. 1904 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Furnishing fabric of Jacquard woven wool with a printed wool warp. The warp face of mid-green wool ground has staggered rows of linked stylised thistle heads. These are in two shades of beige wool weft and a binder warp of beige mercerised cotton, with central lobe and petal clusters in warp face wool. Printed before weaving in mid-blue, shading to pale blue and yellow, deepening to yellow ochre. The double warp consists of wool printed before weaving in patches of mid-green, mid-blue to pale blue, and yellow to yellow ochre and beige mercerised cotton. The triple weft consists of paired wool yarns in two shades of beige and mid-brown mercerised cotton. The top is edged with a green wool binding and the bottom is on the wrong side, edged with fancy braid and on the right with green wool binding.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Jacquard woven and printed wool, cotton |
Brief description | Furnishing fabric of Jacquard woven wool, made by A.H. Lee & Sons, England, ca. 1904. |
Physical description | Furnishing fabric of Jacquard woven wool with a printed wool warp. The warp face of mid-green wool ground has staggered rows of linked stylised thistle heads. These are in two shades of beige wool weft and a binder warp of beige mercerised cotton, with central lobe and petal clusters in warp face wool. Printed before weaving in mid-blue, shading to pale blue and yellow, deepening to yellow ochre. The double warp consists of wool printed before weaving in patches of mid-green, mid-blue to pale blue, and yellow to yellow ochre and beige mercerised cotton. The triple weft consists of paired wool yarns in two shades of beige and mid-brown mercerised cotton. The top is edged with a green wool binding and the bottom is on the wrong side, edged with fancy braid and on the right with green wool binding. |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Given by Miss Judith Browning |
Collection | |
Accession number | T.86A-1972 |
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Record created | June 24, 2009 |
Record URL |
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