Dress Fabric thumbnail 1
Not on display

Dress Fabric

ca. 1860 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This Jacquard woven silk and cotton mix fabric was manufactured by W. & C. Morley of Cheapside, London in about 1860. The fabric was designed to be made into dresses or waistcoats. The pattern is of leaf shapes and decorative meanders in blue and two shades of red. A bright palette was a dominant feature of mid-Victorian textile design. In 1856 the first truly chemical dye, Perkins' mauve, appeared, followed by aniline red two years later and then a rainbow of bright, garish colours. Few of the shades had been seen before and they had a strong novelty value. With this type of colour so inexpensive to produce, many people could afford fabrics dyed in, until then, unusal hues.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Jacquard-woven silk and cotton
Brief description
Dress fabric of Jacquard-woven silk and cotton, manufactured by Messrs. W.& C. Morley, London, ca. 1860
Physical description
Dress fabric of Jacquard-woven silk and cotton. With a design consisting of leaf shapes and decorative meanders in two shades of blue silk and two shades of red on a green cotton ground.
Dimensions
  • Height: 3.75in
  • Width: 6.5in
Summary
This Jacquard woven silk and cotton mix fabric was manufactured by W. & C. Morley of Cheapside, London in about 1860. The fabric was designed to be made into dresses or waistcoats. The pattern is of leaf shapes and decorative meanders in blue and two shades of red. A bright palette was a dominant feature of mid-Victorian textile design. In 1856 the first truly chemical dye, Perkins' mauve, appeared, followed by aniline red two years later and then a rainbow of bright, garish colours. Few of the shades had been seen before and they had a strong novelty value. With this type of colour so inexpensive to produce, many people could afford fabrics dyed in, until then, unusal hues.
Bibliographic reference
Parry, Linda. British Textiles from 1850 to 1900 London : Victoria and Albert Museum 1993. Plate 23.
Other number
AP.318:5 - Previous number
Collection
Accession number
T.38D-1959

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Record createdFebruary 18, 2004
Record URL
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