The document print is at the top,
the reproduction from Lately Arrived from London at the bottom.
Chintzes, large scale cotton florals originally printed in India were a fashion rage from the 17th through the early 19th centuries.
Nineteenth-century white ground chintzes often survive
as Broderie Perse designs in American applique quilts.
Annie Righton Smith, Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Gift of Patricia Smith Melton 1998.149.19
Cut-out chintz or Broderie Perse quilt from an online auction.
Notice the free form stars scattered around the images cut from white ground chintz.
White-ground chintz border
Reproduction quilt top by Roseanne Smith
Roseanne's quilting this top now.
The Netherlands was one of the few European countries that permitted free trade in chintzes. Many bold articles of clothing survive there. Above two baby jackets (jakje in Dutch); below two baby caps, the top example a dark ground chintz, the bottom a white ground chintz.
Banyan from Tasha Tudor's collection
Click here and scroll down to see King George IV's white-ground chintz banyan
Read more about the history of chintz
At this blog post MoreWeJAdore:
And this one from TheDreamstress
And a reenactor site:
http://www.vam.ac.uk/images/image/40428-popup.html
And the Kyoto Costume Institute
http://www.kci.or.jp/archives/digital_archives/detail_56_e.html
And see another post by me about chintz with lotsa links.
http://barbarabrackman.blogspot.com/2009/09/chintz-george-iv.html
Click here to find out how to order a white-ground reproduction from the American Quilt Study Group
And you'd better buy yardage from my Lately Arrived from London collection---yardage in shops soon.
Very interesting. I didn't know that chintz fabrics were ever used for clothing. I had assumed it was decorative fabric for the home. Thanks for sharing that information.
ReplyDeleteOh yardage is on the list, but will need to get to the shop when the truck arrives as the large scale fabs sell much faster - the bolt only holds 15 yards which goes fast.....love large yardage of the large prints...
ReplyDeleteyeah! A topic on Dutch fabrics and quilts! Woohooo! I love that, since I am dutch....
ReplyDeleteGreat posts. Thanks for the links
ReplyDeleteSee Quilt It and Dotty's Dutch blog with Dutch quilts old and new by passting this addresas in your web browser.
ReplyDeletehttp://dorryvanbeers.blogspot.com/
Thank you so much for linking to us at morewejadore.com. Your blog is wonderful and I'm so flattered you found my post on Chintz interesting.
ReplyDeleteGreat article!
ReplyDeleteI love chintz, thanks for all the info.
ReplyDeleteI adore those baby jackets and that coat is to die for!