Linen Press thumbnail 1
Linen Press thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Europe 1600-1815, Room 7, The Sheikha Amna Bint Mohammed Al Thani Gallery

Linen Press

1630-50 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In 17th century Netherlands, decorated linen presses, sometimes set on a substantial matching table-base, were often listed in the reception rooms of prosperous household inventories, rather than in the working quarters, reflecting the value, prestige and importance of high quality linen bedclothes and tableware. Such linens were laundered and pressed very carefully to enhance their appearance. This mid-size press would have been used for table napkins and smaller garments such as aprons and kerchiefs. As many as about 20 textiles could have been pressed at one time by the provision of additional pressing boards.

This example was acquired at an English country house sale, as English, but is now thought to be Dutch, on account on its distinctive decoration of fluting and 'jewel' ornaments of ebonised wood.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Oak and ebonised wood, the screw possibly fruitwood
Brief description
Netherlands, 1630-50
Physical description
Oak linen press with central screw-thread to raise and lower the pressing plate, ornamented with fluting and applied motifs in ebonised wood.

The base consists of a horizontal lower plate (now split centrally along its length) with moulded edges, set on two carved feet. The upper pressing plate is a single piece with moulded edges, and a cut-out at each end that runs between the press uprights; it is fixed via a moulded oak block of rhombus shape to a single turned and threaded screw (walnut or fruitwood),which is pierced to receive a turn rod (missing 2013). The screw is gripped in the upper framework of the press which consists of two uprights joined by a moulded top rail, decorated with fluting, applied ebonised split turnings, buttons and 'jewel' ornaments, and turned finials.

Dimensions
  • Height: 56.5cm (minimum)
  • Width: 41.7cm
  • Depth: 37.5cm
With the screw raised, the height will be increased
Marks and inscriptions
N [reversed] S (Stamped on foot)
Gallery label
Linen press 1630-50 In the Dutch Republic, highly decorated pieces of furniture for pressing and storing linen were proudly displayed. This press would have been used to put crisply defined folds into small linen items, like napkins, after washing. The quantity and quality of a family’s household linen was a mark of status throughout Europe. Dutch Republic, now the Netherlands Oak, possibly fruitwood and ebonised wood(09.12.2015)
Object history
Bought for £4. 6s. 9. at a sale of objects belonging to Mr Edward Peacock ('a collector') of Pottesford Manor, near Brigg, Lincolnshire, by Messrs Spring and Son, 1/6/1892, lot 217. RF 4041/1892, as English, 17th century. 'Small linen press (damaged)'

This press was purchased as English but is now regarded as Dutch, on the basis of its distinctive ornament.

Construction
Linen presses are carefully designed to withstand the great forces exerted in use. The structure uses oak, a tough hardwood, with wedged joints to prevent the uprights pulling out of the base under pressure. The wide sled feet provide greater stability than individual corner feet. The screw (Dutch, spil) uses a harder wood such as beech or elm, sometimes stained to imitate a tropical hardwood. A closer thread would make the screw less prone to unwind under pressure. The bar handle was made of iron, brass or hardwood, and occasionally decorated. Where the screw meets the pressing block a special fixing was needed to prevent the press plate revolving as the screw turns: usually two pins on a flange.
Historical context
In 17th century Netherlands, decorated linen presses for use and ornament were a status symbol, reflecting the value, prestige and importance of high quality linen bedclothes and tableware. Whereas undecorated, purely utilitarian presses were kept in work rooms such as the attic (and so substantial that they might be included in a house sale as a fixture), decorated presses such as this example were prominently displayed in the reception rooms (typically the voorhuis, or front room) of prosperous households, where guests were received or business carried out. Decorated presses have survived in larger numbers than the plain presses that were replaced as they wore out. Larger presses were usually set on a substantial matching table-base. The dolls house of Petronella de la Court c.1670-90 (Centraal Museum, Utrecht) shows, on the top floor, a laundry room with a linen press on stand.

Wealthy households possessed multiple sets of linen in a range of qualities - for the body, bed and table, including napkins, table cloths, bedsheets, hand towels and garments – amounting to hundreds of pieces in total.

It is clear from 17th century Dutch paintings that crisply defined folds in show textiles were considered highly desirable. A linen press was used only at the end of the lengthy laundering process, which involved washing (at home or sent out to specialist launderers), bleaching (in outdoor bleaching fields), and subsequent stages that often occurred in the attic: hanging on a line of plaited straw (or in England of horsehair or cowhair), starching, folding on a deal trestle table, ironing with two ceramic or metal irons, polishing with a solid glass ‘stone’. Diskant (p.18) says that screw-type linen presses were used to press damp folded cloth. Pijzel-Dommisse (p.10) suggests that domestic linen was generally sent out of the house for washing and bleaching. Mangling, with a mangle board may have been part of the smoothing process, an alternative to a linen press, rather than removing the excess wash or rinse water (wringing or 'wrenching').

Smaller presses (like this one), without a table-base and easily portable, are nearly always decorated. Aside from their display function, set on a chest or drawer-leaf table, they would have been used to press small linens that were not starched and ironed, such as table napkins and flat, square, kerchiefs. The linen aprons worn by children in some late 16c/early 17c portraits show a grid of fold lines, suggesting that they were smoothed and kept in a linen press. Collars, cuffs and caps and any shaped linen accessories, would generally have been starched and ironed not pressed.

Some smaller linen presses carry carved decoration, and are fitted with a single drawer. They could generally have been used with as many as about 20 pressing leaves, but wear on the screw suggests that this example was generally used with a few. The leaves were generally wider at the front than the back, so that they could be slid easily into the press. Many, being loose, have become lost. Van Aalst and Hofstede suggest that linens would have been kept for a long time in the press, but do not specify the period. They also speculate that small presses were used to press flowers (p. 430). Linen presses have sometimes been confused with presses in wood and metal used in book binding, the design of which is however quite different.

Additional comments from Susan North, November 2013
The idea that large quantities of linen were considered necessary in part because linen was customarily laundered only two or three times per year, seems without a solid base of evidence. Most wealthy and aristocratic families had full-time laundry servants who would not have been idle for long periods, and mention of laundry in the 18th century domestic advice, implies or states directly that laundry was a weekly task, which corresponds with payments for soap, blue, washerwomen, etc from some household accounts. From other accounts, there was some indication that it may have been done monthly, especially by country gentry - Rev. Coles, Mrs Purefoy, Parson Woodeforde, etc. Domestic advice warns that stains will set if not washed out immediately, and even unused clean linen will yellow or grow mouldy if left for several months. Furthermore, leaving damp rags in piles was the first step in the decomposition of linen for papermaking, one with a risk of self-combustion: 'they'll catch fire as wet hay will'.

Bibliography
Loek van Aalst and Annigje Hofstede, Noord- Nederlandse meubelen van renaissance tot vroege barok 1550-1670 (Houten : Hes & De Graaf ublishers, 2011.) pp.429- 442

Mariët Westermann et al., Art & Home. Dutch Interiors in the Age of Rembrandt (Denver Art Museum and The Newark Museum. Waanders Publishers, Zwolle, 2001) cat. 59

Eda Diskant, 'A 17th Century Dutch Room' Philadelphia Museum of Art Bulletin, Winter 1984

Jet Pijzel-Dommisse, The 17th-century dolls' houses of the Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam, 1994)

Pamela Sambrook, The Country House Servant (1999)
Summary
In 17th century Netherlands, decorated linen presses, sometimes set on a substantial matching table-base, were often listed in the reception rooms of prosperous household inventories, rather than in the working quarters, reflecting the value, prestige and importance of high quality linen bedclothes and tableware. Such linens were laundered and pressed very carefully to enhance their appearance. This mid-size press would have been used for table napkins and smaller garments such as aprons and kerchiefs. As many as about 20 textiles could have been pressed at one time by the provision of additional pressing boards.

This example was acquired at an English country house sale, as English, but is now thought to be Dutch, on account on its distinctive decoration of fluting and 'jewel' ornaments of ebonised wood.
Collection
Accession number
532-1892

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
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