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Fabric printing block

Part of the collection: Fabric printing matrices

Popularization note

For centuries people have been decorating textiles by printing patterns with different kinds of stamps, from very simple potato stamps to specially carved wooden blocks with intricate designs. The fabrics were printed with two techniques. The first one involved the direct imprinting of a design on the fabric from a block covered with paint, while the second one involved the imprinting of an insulating mass on the fabric to protect the covered areas from the effects of the dye. Both methods have most probably equally long history, but the second one, called batik printing, has been popularized in Europe only in the 17th century. The presented stamp has a floral ornament made with woodcarving technique and brass pins hammered into the wood. The main, recurring motif on the stamp is a calicular flower drawn from the side. Considering the popularity of Orientalism in Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries, it could have been a lotus flower. In many cultures of the Far East, it has a rich symbolic meaning. Presumably, the stamp was used in one of the local printing shops which operated in Pomerania in the 19th century. Its products, thanks to their durability and elegance were considerably popular, but eventually, they were superseded by fabrics produced by the modern textile industry.

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown
unknown

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 5,2 cm, width: 18,7 cm

Object type

matrix

Creation time / dating

1701 — 1900

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Pomorze Zachodnie, region historyczny (Europa); znalezienie: nieznane

Identification number

MNS/E/463

Location / status

object is not displayed now

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