Showing 4 items matching " bedcovers"
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Mont De LanceyFunctional object - Bedspread, Unknown
... ...bedcovers...Mont De Lancey 71 Wellington Road Wandin North yarra-valley-and-dandenong-ranges bedspreads bedcovers A white cotton self embossed single bedspread. ...A white cotton self embossed single bedspread. It has a leaf pattern and a self border.bedspreads, bedcovers -
Embroiderers Guild, VictoriaTextile - Bedspread, C. 1910
... ... Bedcovers...Embroiderers Guild, Victoria 170 Wattletree Road Malvern melbourne Embroidery Drawn thread Bedcovers 1900-20 Y. WRIGHT (signature) Heavy white linen embroidered with two different bands of drawn thread work. ...Heavy white linen embroidered with two different bands of drawn thread work. Large flowers in drawn thread and satin stitch.Y. WRIGHT (signature)embroidery, drawn thread, bedcovers, 1900-20 -
Queen Victoria Women's CentreRe-purposed Quilt, Patsy Coverdale, The Century Bedspread, c.1975
... Patsy Coverdale wrote on about the artwork which is found with the bedspread "This trousseau bedspread commemorates a century of our daily living, of four generations, a bedcover where many loves and lives have begun and ended. ...Queen Victoria Women's Centre 210 Lonsdale Street Melbourne melbourne Patsy Coverdale wrote on about the artwork which is found with the bedspread "This trousseau bedspread commemorates a century of our daily living, of four generations, a bedcover where many loves and lives have begun and ended. ...Patsy Coverdale wrote on about the artwork which is found with the bedspread "This trousseau bedspread commemorates a century of our daily living, of four generations, a bedcover where many loves and lives have begun and ended. Once immaculate, its years of service, of blood, sweat and tears, have seen so many building washes that today's embroideries would shrink from. I rescued it, patched its tears and wears with needlework from ancestors and aunties to celebrate the International year of Women in 1975. It symbols include the IYW to the left, women's work and its rhythms and cycles, a pearl button for our pleasure centre. The male phallic symbol illustrates the organ's early development and its natural power with the energy of relativity behind it all."A quilt made for the centenary of the Hospital made for the International year of women 1975. Re-purposed from a quilt used at the hospital. Given to QVWC in 1997 for the grand opening. textile art, centenaries, hospitals -
Embroiderers Guild, VictoriaDomestic Object - Irish Knotted Work Bed Cover, 18th Century
... ... Bedcover...Embroidery Whitework Bedcover 18th Century Ireland Knotted linen thread couched onto white linen bed cover. ...Donor's mother bought this from the west of Ireland in 1950. Said to have been embroidered by her grandmother and her ladies in 1780-1800. (This may be a later rather than actual date). Knotting was a genteel pastime for leisured ladies requiring little concentration, so conversation could be carried out. Favoured at Court and practised in England in the late 17th C in William and Mary's reign and Queen Anne's reign in the early 18th C.Knotting was a genteel pastime for leisured ladies requiring little concentration, so conversation could be carried out. Favoured at Court and practised in England in the late 17th C in William and Mary's reign and Queen Anne's reign in the early 18th C. A knotting shuttle, larger than a tatting shuttle, made knots at every quarter inch or 6 mm intervals in string, linen, silk or wool. Mrs Mary Delaney enjoyed knotting and preferred linen thread which was stronger. The Ulster Museum in Belfast holds an embroidered bedcover by Delany, one of the few complete pieces of embroidery made by her. The threads between the knots was dependent on the thickness of the thread. This fashionable occupation was often mocked by men, Sir Charles Sedley, a wit and libertine wrote a verse mocking Queen Mary, the dull Protestant wife of William 111: "Blest we, who from such queens are freed/ Who, buy vain superstition led,/ Are always telling beads;/But here's a queen now, thanks to God/ Who, when she rides in Coach abroad/ Is always knotting threads. In the Spectator of 1712 it was suggested that men might take up knotting. Dr Johnson attempted to learn the skill but told Boswell "I once tried knotting: Dempster's sister undertook to teach me, but I could not learn it." Knotted linen thread couched onto white linen bed cover. embroidery, whitework, bedcover, 18th century, ireland
