Thursday 5 November 2009

Bonny, Beautiful Bright Brocades!









As much as I love the 18th & 19th century French printed fabrics such as toiles, I am really drawn to woven textiles, be they heavy weight upholstery fabrics made from wool, hemp, silk or a mixture of fibres, or feather down-light wisps of fine silk dress brocade from the 1700 & 1800s. There is a bounty of texture and weight in woven textiles; brocades, damasks and tapestry woven fabrics catch the light beautifully, looking subtly different depending on the light in which they ar viewed. Here are a selection of the two types, a beautiful Art Nouveau wool & silk furnishing brocade, two deep blue Victorian era flax & silk furnishing brocades, a 19th century piece of wool & silk furnishing fabric in depest magenta & pale red, part of a huge, heavy wool Arts & Crafts chateau curtain panel, and 2 beautiful complex silk dress brocades dating to about 1750-80.

3 comments:

  1. Gorgeous!! This is eye candy. They are so beautiful. Your blog is all about art, beauty, and the appreciation and honor of these lovely things. I love visiting you and coming back to feast again.

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  2. Gorgeous!! This is eye candy. They are so beautiful. Your blog is all about art, beauty, and the appreciation and honor of these lovely things. I love visiting you and coming back to feast again.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks Phyllis, eye candy indeed! I do enjoy using the blog to share some of the wonderful textiles I come across, even if some of them only stay with me a little while, they are all logged and loved in my mind's Textile Museum! xx

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