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Morris & Co.
Brer Rabbit is taken from 17th-century Italian silk and Morris first registered the design in 1882. Named after the Uncle Remus children's books popular at the time this fabric design was originally indigo discharge printed. Today the Morris studio has tried to replicate the mottled appearance of this earlier method using modern printing processes.
Sanderson
Fine, detailed pencil drawings depict life-size squirrels, rabbits, and hedgehogs set among British flora. Printed on a linen-mix fabric, this design is suitable for light upholstery and looks delightful on small chairs and headboards.
Morriss's design influences could be visual or literary, demonstrated here with Brer Rabbit, a mischievous folk hero from a popular 19th-century children's book. Recolored by Ben Pentreath, the designs of large scrolling leaves and symmetrical oak trees imbue the 1960s and 1970s feel with bold color combinations inspired by the Morris and Co. archive.
Paired birds alternate between perched and in-flight in this serene 1878 tapestry design from William Morris. Surprising bursts of color emerge upon closer inspection, pulling the eye towards the original hand-driven jacquard loom production quality. William Morris designed a bird in 1878 to adorn the walls of his drawing room in Kelmscott House. His friend and neighbor, the noted typographer Sir Emery Walker, adorned his dining room with an identical bird tapestry after receiving an inheritance from either Morris or Philip Webb, the famous arts and crafts architect. Our modern bird tapestry retains William Morris's high regard for craftsmanship, being woven by Morris & Co. craftspeople right here in the UK using a cotton-wool blend.
Schumacher
A charming, of-the-moment print inspired by an early 20th-century document. It’s printed on slubbed linen that gives it a lovely antique quality.
This realistic depiction of our favorite British birds was inspired by an 18th-century painting of plants and animals. A green woodpecker, a wren, a robin, a thrush, and a pair of blue tits on their nest of eggs all make their home in a modern tree of life. To complete the scene butterflies insects ladybirds and various woodland berries adorn the tree. The design is painted by watercolor in exquisitely fine detail. The fabric is digitally printed to achieve the nuances of the artwork and the number of natural colors and tones in the design.
C.F.A. Voysey the famous English architect textile designer and associate of William Morris created Squirrel and Dove in the Arts & Crafts style of the time. The pattern was first produced by Sanderson as wallpaper in the 1890s and is now available as both a fabric and wallpaper.
Kelmscott Tree is a new design by Alison Gee. Inspired by Morris's bed curtains at his home Kelmscott Manor which was embroidered by May Morris in 1891 Kelmscott Tree has been painted in the Morris studio and adapted into a beautiful embroidery of trees birds and flowers.
This printed fabric depicts scrolling acanthus leaves, peacocks, hares, and foxes amongst bunches of wildflowers, inspired by the Forest Tapestry by Morris and Co. and designed by Alison Gee in 2013. Digitally printed on velvet and linen for a sumptuous finish with durability suitable for upholstery fabric.
Clarke&Clarke LLC
This charming Morris design from 1882 has been printed on a beautiful heavy-weight 100% linen fabric with natural flax tones and a subtle texture running throughout.
For Morris, the tapestry was the highest form of decorative art. Inspired in part by J. H. Dearle’s The Brook Tapestry and the friezes that sit beneath the Holy Grail Tapestries, this digitally printed fabric design recreates the crispness and beautiful detail of medieval tapestries. One colorway is printed on cotton velvet and two on textured cloth reminiscent of original tapestry surfaces. Also available as a wide-width wallpaper.
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