Bird and Anemone
Furnishing Fabric
1881 (design registered)
1881 (design registered)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This printed cotton furnishing textile features one of the few repeating patterns used by the designer William Morris (1834-1896) for both textiles and wallpapers. This was one of three monochrome patterns designed especially by Morris to be printed by the indigo-discharge printing method, which had preoccupied him since 1875.
Existing documents suggest that experiments using indigo for these designs started in April 1881 at Morris's workshop in Queen Square in London. They were finally successfully printed after he moved into his factory at Merton Abbey, Wimbledon, London, in June the same year. This example was surface printed later in madder, a natural red plant dye. The date when this cotton was printed can be calculated through marks and labels on the sample.
The attached paper label has a 'kite mark' indicating that the pattern was registered with the Patents Office on 17 June 1882. The selvedge (finished edge of the fabric) is printed 'Morris & Company 449 Oxford Street'. This form was used between 1877 and 1917, when the shop moved to another address. An additional label marked 'Decorators Ltd' uses a term adopted by the Morris firm in 1905. This narrows the date of the sample to between 1882 and 1905.
Existing documents suggest that experiments using indigo for these designs started in April 1881 at Morris's workshop in Queen Square in London. They were finally successfully printed after he moved into his factory at Merton Abbey, Wimbledon, London, in June the same year. This example was surface printed later in madder, a natural red plant dye. The date when this cotton was printed can be calculated through marks and labels on the sample.
The attached paper label has a 'kite mark' indicating that the pattern was registered with the Patents Office on 17 June 1882. The selvedge (finished edge of the fabric) is printed 'Morris & Company 449 Oxford Street'. This form was used between 1877 and 1917, when the shop moved to another address. An additional label marked 'Decorators Ltd' uses a term adopted by the Morris firm in 1905. This narrows the date of the sample to between 1882 and 1905.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Bird and Anemone (manufacturer's title) |
Materials and techniques | Dyed cotton ground, with a block-printed pattern in red madder dye |
Brief description | Bird and Anemone printed cotton |
Physical description | Furnishing fabric |
Dimensions |
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Gallery label |
|
Credit line | Given by Morris & Co. Ltd. |
Object history | Designed by William Morris (born in London, 1834, died there in 1896) and printed by Morris & Co. at Merton Abbey, Wimbledon, London |
Summary | This printed cotton furnishing textile features one of the few repeating patterns used by the designer William Morris (1834-1896) for both textiles and wallpapers. This was one of three monochrome patterns designed especially by Morris to be printed by the indigo-discharge printing method, which had preoccupied him since 1875. Existing documents suggest that experiments using indigo for these designs started in April 1881 at Morris's workshop in Queen Square in London. They were finally successfully printed after he moved into his factory at Merton Abbey, Wimbledon, London, in June the same year. This example was surface printed later in madder, a natural red plant dye. The date when this cotton was printed can be calculated through marks and labels on the sample. The attached paper label has a 'kite mark' indicating that the pattern was registered with the Patents Office on 17 June 1882. The selvedge (finished edge of the fabric) is printed 'Morris & Company 449 Oxford Street'. This form was used between 1877 and 1917, when the shop moved to another address. An additional label marked 'Decorators Ltd' uses a term adopted by the Morris firm in 1905. This narrows the date of the sample to between 1882 and 1905. |
Collection | |
Accession number | T.654-1919 |
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Record created | March 27, 2003 |
Record URL |
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