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English Embroidery from the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, 1580-1700: "Twixt Art and Nature"
This is a catalog of an exhibition of embroidery at the Bard
Graduate Center, curated by Melinda Watt and Andrew Morrall.
It is the first exhibition of the Met's English embroidery
since 1973 and the first large show of its holdings since
Irwin Untermeyer gave the museum more than a hundred
embroideries from this period. The exhibition of 85 works
includes 50 pieces from the Untermeyer gift.
The period following 1642 was especially tumultuous: two civil
wars culminated in the beheading of King Charles I in 1649
followed by ten years of Cromwell, the Restoration (1660), the
Great Plague (1665), the Great Fire of London (1666), and
finally the founding of a constitutional monarcy in 1689.
Despite the country's woes, great needlework was produced. In
the catalog there is an essay by Cristina Balloffet Carr, a
conservator at the Met, showing photographs of stitches
magnified 30 times, showing the incredible skill in technique
used to create these works of needle art.
$65.00
AVAILABLE FEBRUARY 2009
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PATTERNS OF FASHION circa 1540-1660: The cut
and construction of linen shirts,
smocks, neckwear, headwear
and accessories for men and women
by Janet Arnold, with additional material by Jenny
Tiramani and Santina Levey
This book is based on research carried out by Janet Arnold
over a period of more than twenty years during which she
studied and recorded- in drawings, scale patterns and
photographs- surviving linen clothing wherever she came across
it. But it was a result of her work on the tailored garments
of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries that she became
more aware of the contribution linen clothing made to fashion,
and began to plan a companion volume solely devoted to it.
This is an amazing piece of work that brings understanding of
early clothing and textiles to a new level. Lavishly
illustrated in color with elaborate drawings and notes. 128
pages, $70.00
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19th Century Embroidery Techniques by Gail
Marsh
In the 19th century, needlework was the most popular pastime
of the
female leisured classes. The ladies of the house would occupy
their time with absorbing hobbies such as watercolor painting,
reading, singing, playing the piano, crochet, knitting, and
colorful needlework. Many a dull afternoon would have been
filled with sorting out the threads and stitching a colorful
floral spray to grace the drawing room and be admired by all.
This delightful book is a must for any student of embroidery,
fashion and textiles, craft persons interested in historical
embroidery techniques, as well as collectors of textiles.
Themes covered are:
-How samplers were used as a
teaching device
-The 19th century craze for Berlin wool work-The influence
of William Morris and the Arts and Crafts movement
-The importance of whitework to cottage industry
-Applied and pieced embroidery in patchwork
-Making "nick nacks" for the home, embroidered gifts and
dress adornment
-19th century needlework tools
Hardbound, 192 pages, $25.00
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