Dress Fabric
1934 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This georgette dress fabric is printed with a repeat of flowers and leaves, in yellow, white, light green and brown on a lilac background. Floral printed fabrics held a prominent place in every smart woman's wardrobe in the 1930s. Motifs floating on a plain ground worked admirably; navy, black and brown background colours were perennially in vogue. The use of floral decoration on cloth was hardly new but the flowers of the 1930s blossomed with fresh life and vigour. Detailed, naturalistic representations in the traditional manner were replaced with a freedom of line and form closely allied to contemporary movements in the fine and graphic arts.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Screen-printed georgette |
Brief description | Dress fabric of screen-printed georgette, made by Tootal, Broadhurst, Lee & Co., England, 1934 |
Physical description | Dress fabric of screen-printed georgette printed with a repeat of flowers and leaves in yellow, white, light green and brown on a lilac background. |
Production type | Mass produced |
Credit line | Given by Manchester Design Registry |
Object history | Registered File number 1974/3231. Registration number 338621. |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This georgette dress fabric is printed with a repeat of flowers and leaves, in yellow, white, light green and brown on a lilac background. Floral printed fabrics held a prominent place in every smart woman's wardrobe in the 1930s. Motifs floating on a plain ground worked admirably; navy, black and brown background colours were perennially in vogue. The use of floral decoration on cloth was hardly new but the flowers of the 1930s blossomed with fresh life and vigour. Detailed, naturalistic representations in the traditional manner were replaced with a freedom of line and form closely allied to contemporary movements in the fine and graphic arts. |
Bibliographic reference | Thirties Floral Fabrics. Series 3 (The Victoria & Albert colour books). London : Michael Joseph, published in association with the Victoria and Albert Museum, 1988 |
Collection | |
Accession number | T.242-1987 |
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Record created | January 14, 2004 |
Record URL |
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