QUILTS & FABRIC: PAST & PRESENT


Friday, April 17, 2026

Morris Muse: The Wardle Family

 

Collection of the Whitworth Museum University of Manchester
Elizabeth Young-Wardle Wardle (1834-1902) 
in the early 1890s with a sewing box. 
Not a conventional muse but an important business woman & artist

In 1857 Elizabeth Young-Wardle married distant relation Thomas Wardle, heir to a dye works in the area of Leek in Staffordshire, England and gave birth to 14 children before 1878. Despite marathon motherhood Elizabeth made a career of needlework and embroidery for herself, her family and her neighbors.


Thomas Wardle is pictured with ten of his surviving children in the late 1870s. Textiles were the family business. In the 1870s Thomas and Morris became friends united by similar interests in antique textile processes. Thomas experimented with traditional indigo dyeing & printing methods that Morris commissioned for his prints. Morris and Elizabeth Wardle were both interested in traditional embroidered ornament.

Elizabeth and embroidery students 1888

Elizabeth and friends in the late 1860s began embroidering ecclesiastic hangings in traditional style, altar frontals and other decorations for local churches. Architects who were building and restoring churches commissioned the Leek women to stitch their ideas for traditional needlework.

Khartoum Altar Frontal at Bradford Cathedral
by the Leek Embroidery Society

Elizabeth became skillful at design, handwork, research and teaching and in 1879 after that last baby she organized The Leek Embroidery Society occupying a classroom, store and workshop space next door to her home. 

Wardle House, 54 St. Edward Street

The Morris/Wardle collaboration also provided secular merchandise for William and May Morris's London shop, which sold embroidery patterns, kits, finished panels and furniture like this fire screen incorporating the needlework.  


A few years ago a group of Lady Elizabeth Wardle's embroidery
memorabilia was auctioned. Now in the Whitworth Museum's collection.

The Society’s work for churches and hobbyists was in demand into the 20th century providing income and employment for many Staffordshire women. Patterns, kits, materials and finished needlework were sold in Wardle’s shop in New Bond Street, William Morris’s showroom in Oxford Street, Liberty & Company in Regent Street and at Debenham & Freebody, off Oxford Street. 


Details showing stitches in Leek Embroidery Society work

Much of the thread is an Indian silk in which the Wardle dye mill specialized. Tussar silk grew wild in India with different qualities than cultivated silk, among them some negatives such as resistance to conventional dyes. Thomas Wardle figured out how to give the Indian silk permanent color and became the leading British importer for a product that was much in demand during the Arts & Crafts embroidery fashion. 

Collection of the Whitworth Museum University of Manchester
Sample of Wardle's indigo block printing

When William Morris and Thomas Wardle began working together in the 1870s Morris persuaded the dyemaster to learn the art of woodblock printing. Wardle's mills became the leading site of the old-fashioned technology, printing Morris patterns and yardage for others.

Leek Embroidery Society members designed patterns but they also transformed Wardle's block-printed silks, velvets and cottons by laying embroidery stitching over the printed designs.

An altered print?
The Society used a rather narrow range of simple stitches that
showed off the Tussar silk's color and lustre well.
Another link between Leek and London was Elizabeth's brother George Young Wardle (1834-1910) who assisted William Morris, managing the business and perhaps using his painting skills to finish Morris's print designs.

Collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum
Wreath or Poppy About 1880

The V&A catalog for this watercolor on paper tells us (to my surprise!)
"Wardle was an excellent recorder of pattern....The draughtsman responsible for this technically adept drawing (intended as a guide for the printer to use when matching the colours) may not have been Morris, as his strengths were more conceptual than illustrative. Instead, it is possible that... George Wardle executed this design for production, working from Morris's first version....This design was intended as a guide for the printer to use when matching the colours. Pencil notes with instructions about the colours have been added to the drawing on the front and on the reverse."


From the Leek Embroidery Exhibition at the Nicholson Museum in 2013,
Detail Nine Orders of Angels. drawn by 
George Young Wardle in 1864. Embroidery done in 1899.

This set of angels was embroidered by "Miss Winterbottom of Stone, Staffordshire, a member of Leek School of Embroidery," possibly Christina Winterbottom (1861-?) listed in the 1881 census in Stone as a "Shop Keeper Fancy And Embroidery" or her sister Amanda A Winterbottom (1858-1948) a "dressmaker." Christina taught at the Leek School.

George Wardle's tale had taken a dramatic turn in 1861 when he wed a notorious murder suspect from Glasgow. Madeleine Hamilton Smith had been tried four years earlier for killing her lover by poisoning him with arsenic, charges had not been proven in court.
The newspapers could not get enough of the crime.

"This case, regarding which such an intense interest has been excited, not only in Glasgow but over all Scotland, commenced this morning ...in Edinburgh. About a dozen .... ladies, were in court, and some of them evinced such a determination to sit out the proceedings that they brought their work with them and commenced stitching as soon as they sat down.... Madeleine Hamilton Smith, a very pretty girl, was placed at the bar...."  
Glasgow Herald,- July 1, 1857
The jury weighed circumstantial evidence that she'd poisoned former lover Pierre Emile L'Angelier
....Madeline had purchased arsenic; L'Angelier was threatening to blackmail her but the jury delivered a verdict of "Not Proven."

Magdalene Hamilton Smith 1835 -1928
Among her names: Magdelene, Madeline, Lena
After the verdict she fled to London.

George may have met Madeline in London's Morris workshops where she possibly worked as an embroiderer. The business end of the shop was ably managed in the last decades of the century by two brothers Frank and Robert Smith---her relations?

During the years George managed Morris business the Wardles raised two children Mary and Thomas born in the early 1860s. In 1889 when George retired from the firm they separated. Madeline moved to New York City following son Thomas. After George's death in 1910 she married George Sheehy, a concrete contractor over 20 years younger than she. New Yorker Lena Sheehy died in 1928 in her 90s though loathe to admit her age.

Lena Sheehy with granddaughters
What Elizabeth Wardle thought of her sister-in-law has not been recorded.

Looking at the talented Wardles one realizes the Morris Arts & Crafts movement was a collaborative enterprise between like-minded artists and business people. William Morris gets most of the credit today but we would have less of a legacy without the Wardle family who provided design, production and materials.

Collection of St. Edward the Confessor Church in Leek
 Photograph by Richard Knisely-Marpole
Embroidery by the Leek Embroidery Society 
Silk thread perhaps on silk damask

See Richard Knisely-Marpole's photos for details of more miniature masterpieces. 

His photo of a sunflower embroidery gives us a pattern adaptable to a light-colored print in the Morris Muse collection:
Flowering Scroll in the Parchment colorway


Print this on an 8-1/2" x 11" sheet. 


 The proportions of the embroidery and print in the digital drawing will vary so you might want to adjust the pattern size to fit the fabric you have.

This entwined circle border was a standard design in Leek.


Further Reading
Cathryn Walton, Hidden lives: Leek's Extraordinary Embroiderers

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Show Us KIAs Your Quilts: Topics



We 6 Know-It-Alls Plus have been maintaining a 
Facebook group for about two and a half years.
See: 6knowitalls:showusyourquilts
As far as I can tell we have been posting since November, 2023.

It's a group you have to join but do request membership. We'll let you in promptly. We have about 2,000 readers and contributors.


We want to see your quilts and show off our own photos. Each month we choose a focus based on  fabric, color, techniques, geography, etc. This month the focus is "Regional Clues." What style, fabric, pattern, set and techniques offer a clue to where the quilt was made?

You can ignore the focus, though, and contributors do---
showing us something they just found or asking questions.

From Julie Silber's inventory of antique quilts

 Some readers are total novices and others famous experts. We welcome both. 

Pennsylvania-German descendant Angelina Ritter's deppich (quilt) from
the Goschenhoppen Historians Museum

We'll answer your questions as best we can and bring up new ideas. Our major focus is the visuals---how does a quilt's appearance give us information about the who, where and when a quilt was made. 

Charleston (South Carolina) Museum

As we aren't mindreaders we rarely can tell you Why a quilt was made. 

February 2024

We are fortunate to have many true experts in the group, specialists in regional quiltmaking, dealers who've seen thousands, collectors who own many and textile curators who specialize in various types and ages.

Maine Sampler/Album
Dated 1845-1846 from Cape Elizabeth

We try to be courteous and we'll "86" you if you insult another member.

 But you can swear all you want.

Our archives there contain a LOT of information. 
Search our information by looking for previous posts as topics.

If you don't see this search prompt on your screen look for Search by clicking on the image of the 3 dots.

6KnowItAlls Facebook Group Monthly Topics

2023 November?
11 New York Style
12 Pennsylvania Style

2024
1 Perhaps String Quilts in here
2 Maine Style
3 Feedsacks
4 Early Southern Coast Style
5 Modernism
6 Virginia Style
7 Crazy Quilts
8 Linsey-Woolsey
9 Dogtooth Applique
10 German-American Influence
11 Early Pictorial Applique
12 Scrap Quilts

2025
1 Medallion & Frame Quilts
2 Silk
3 Blue
4 Wool
5 Quilting
6 Dye & Color Problems
7 Inscriptions
8 Home vs Factory Dyed
9 Cotton before 1800
10 Needlework Techniques
11 Professional Designers 1900-45
12 Red & Green Quilts

2026
1 Early Roller Prints
2 Log Cabin Quilts
3 Samplers
4 Regional Clues 


Monday, April 6, 2026

Updated-Backdated Embroidery Style




Considering ideas for a 250th Anniversary Quilt to
mark this year we've looked at the state flowers & birds
fashion of the mid-20th century at this post:

Re-working this embroidery style a century later is only
going to appeal to the nostalgic---of which you might be one.
The aesthetic problem is the datedness of the look. Outline embroidery
was so popular from about 1880 to 1980 that it defined the craft back then.

From Crazy Quilts & Redwork in the 1880s through
the fashion for state flowers, etc.

Laura Wheeler design for State Flowers

The idea of  pictorials outlined in thread replaced the centuries-old technique of filling in the shapes with a variety of stitches.


Early-18th-century filled embroidery

Embroiderers learned a number of filling stitches.

A new era of sharing pattern began about 1880 with a couple of innovations in printing.
One: Printers were able to illustrate inexpensive publications.

Page from Peterson's Magazine showing 
typical late-19th-century embroidery design in outline
form. Did the editor expect you to fill in the butterfly?

Two: Designers like Briggs & Company could print a new hot transfer method in their publications.



Transfer patterns from 1913
Heat released the inked outline.

Read much more about this technology at Mrs. Depew:

Modern Priscilla 1925
At first the outlines were meant to be filled in with fabric or stitches
but embroiderers soon found an outlined chain stitch or running stitch attractive.




I heard Ginny Gunn explain the whole fashion in a couple of sentences that went something
like this: "Limitations in printing in the 1880s dictated the illustrator show an outline with 
instructions to trace the image and fill it in. Of course, they just traced 
it and outlined it in embroidery---no  filler."

Typical outline embroidered in a small, neat chain stitch
Another example of commercial needlework shaping style.

Advice to be ignored in the Omaha World-Herald 1938


Bright colored threads of the time defined the look as did comics
illustration style. One did not mix those threads as in combining
two or three of different shades.



That outline look replaced two techniques. One---traditional
filling stitches. Two---Applique plus Embroidery

TRADITIONAL FILLING STITCHES

The Kensington stitch was a long and short filler stitch taught
by the influential Royal School of Art Needlework, located in Kensington, London.




Satin Stitch---one length


APPLIQUE PLUS EMBROIDERY

I'm thinking birds from Quilt Journeys with variations of filled applique stitches....
Simple shapes, which is where I need to start.

The second style advocated by the Kensington school:
 Combination of appliqued fabric plus embroidery

A style that became a characteristic of the Glasgow School of Embroidery

Classic Stickley gingko pillow design repro by Dianne Ayers combining
applique plus embroidery

Ann MacBeth design 
Glasgow School of Embroidery


Tea Cozy with appliqued leaves & florals outlined in a satin stitch


Trickling down....

 
Combination of Morris Muse fabrics and a neat, contrasting chain
stitch around each shape.


Sue Spargo has led a small revolution in taste using combined applique & embroidery. 
Her applique fabrics are primarily wool but she also uses plain and print cottons.


One could use all those state flower drawings with a filled or applique + embroidery technique.

A Laura Wheeler Sunflower appliqued with
decorative stitching. 

EQ8 with Quilt Journeys Add On

It's all a design experiment. I think I'd be better off using the simpler state flowers and birds from Quilt Journeys. Here's a Columbine for Colorado.