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Garment Fabric
Garment Fabric
Garment Fabric

Garment Fabric

Dateabout 1550-1600
Place MadeItaly, Europe
MediumSilk ciselé voided velvet shot with gilded yarn
Dimensions74.9 x 17.8 cm (29 1/2 x 7 in.)
ClassificationsTextile Arts
Credit LineIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Accession numberT17w6
Status
Not on view
Web CommentaryAmong the most luxurious silk textiles produced in Europe, velvets are fabrics woven with an additional warp, which creates a plush pile surface. Patterns are made by leaving portions of the design free of pile (called voided velvet). Combining cut and uncut pile loops produces contrasts in both color and texture. This technique (called ciselé velvet) embellishes the design since cut pile appears darker than the uncut pile. Velvets made in Italy during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries displayed unusual colors and interesting textures. Decorated velvets were often used for garments and interior furnishings such as drapery and wall hangings. In these situations, velvet catchs light in various ways, revealing subtle gradations of color. Source: Kathy Francis, "Velvets," in Eye of the Beholder, edited by Alan Chong et al. (Boston: ISGM and Beacon Press, 2003): 118.
Id718675
Last Updated8/14/24
EmbARK ObjectID11878
Alt. No. 2 (Cavallo)131
Alt. No. 4 (Old Cavallo)169
Alt. No. 1 (Siple)025
Source ID1036
Garment Fabric
Unknown
about 1550-1600
(c) 2017 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
about 1600-1625
(c) 2015 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
about 1600-1650
Garment Fabric
Unknown
about 1550-1600
Garment Fabric
Unknown
about 1600-1625
Garment Fabric
Unknown
about 1600-1625
Furnishing and Garment Fabric
Unknown
about 1450-1500
(c) 2016 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston
Unknown
about 1500-1550
Furnishing Fabric
Unknown
late 17th century