210 211 Eaton Primer
210 211 Eaton Primer
210 211 Eaton Primer
Blue and
White ResistPrinted Textiles
by Linda Eaton
Curtain from a partial set of bed hangings from the late 1700s.
Scholars have associated designs with large areas of white
ground with England. The same animal and plant motifs appear
in combination with different designs on two other fabrics in
Winterthurs collection. Museum Purchase. (1966.124.5)
This late-1700s design, with large areas of very dark indigo, has
been associated with Rouen, a major center of paste work in
France. Museum Purchase. (1967.106)
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www.antiquesandfineart.com
Institute of History and Art convinced most participants that the blue
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resist fabrics found in this country were imports.
Recent research indicates that the cultural and geographical origin is
a bit more complicated. Newspaper advertisements document the presence of artisans in America printing blue and white patterns from the
1740s through the 1790s, and include men of German, Scots and
English descent. These same sources also show that paste work fabrics
and handkerchiefs were being imported from England, as well as
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Scotland and Silesia. While some resist-printed fabrics can be linked
to a country or region of origin through makers marks or design, attributions for many remain unclear. The problem is exacerbated by the
fact that textiles were traded extensively between all parts of Europe and
America. A few designs have been found in English sample books but
few, if any, examples of the fabrics seem to have survived in that
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country. The lack of evidence of the use of this type of fabric in
Britain as well as the international nature of the trade makes documenting the origins of surviving examples very difficult.
A question that has long perplexed those interested in indigo
resists from the eighteenth century is the technique used to print two
shades of blue. The standard explanation is that areas intended to be
either light blue or white were printed over with paste and dipped in
the dye vat a few times (it takes up to ten dips to achieve a dark
blue). The cloth was then washed and re-printed with paste only
where it was intended to be white. The dark blue is therefore dipped
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more times than the lighter blue areas. Many examples of resist
designs with the sharp edges separating the two shades survive, suggesting they were printed by this method. But other examples in
Winterthurs collection suggest that the light blue color might have
been achieved by dying the cloth a dark blue, then bleaching out
areas by hand with a brush or similar tool. Plans are afoot to attempt
to mimic this process which, if successful, would move us one more
step towards solving the puzzle of paste work.
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