Textile fragment

İsim Textile fragment
Yazar Unknown (maker)
Basım Yeri Egypt (made) Akhmim (found) -
Konu Textiles Africa
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Height: 405mm, Width: 320mm
Kütüphane: Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası 449-1887
Kayıt Numarası 449-1887
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Notlar This is a fragment from a much larger textile, of a type known to have been used for cushion and mattress covers. Here, the thickness points to a mattress cover. The weave, known in antiquity by the Greek term, polymita, literally '[woven with] many heddles', was the first with mechanically repeating designs to have been developed in the western world and may have had its origins in Alexandria. It had been known since the first century and this example, with three field designs and three border designs, each in two contrasting colours, provides a small repertoire of typical patterns: the various bands would have been arranged symmetrically down the length of the cover.
Örnek Metin Transliteration,
İlişki Henry Wallis
Malzemeler ve teknikler Weft-faced compound plain weave Wool Plain Weave
Fiziksel açıklama Fragment from a mattress cover, woven in blue and red wool on a buff-coloured wool ground. The piece is in weft-faced compound weave. The design shows a range of typical patterns: diaper patterns of rosettes within octagons, quatrefoils within lozenges, and fret-ornament in blue; and curved leafy stems, zig-zag lines and geometrical ornament, in red. These patterns are arranged in horizontal bands, with plain stripes between.
Üslup Egyptian Late Antique
Kaynağa git Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru Victoria and Albert Museum

Textile fragment

Yazar Unknown (maker)
Basım Yeri Egypt (made) Akhmim (found) -
Konu Textiles Africa
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Height: 405mm, Width: 320mm
Kütüphane Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası 449-1887
Kayıt Numarası 449-1887
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Notlar This is a fragment from a much larger textile, of a type known to have been used for cushion and mattress covers. Here, the thickness points to a mattress cover. The weave, known in antiquity by the Greek term, polymita, literally '[woven with] many heddles', was the first with mechanically repeating designs to have been developed in the western world and may have had its origins in Alexandria. It had been known since the first century and this example, with three field designs and three border designs, each in two contrasting colours, provides a small repertoire of typical patterns: the various bands would have been arranged symmetrically down the length of the cover.
Örnek Metin Transliteration,
İlişki Henry Wallis
Malzemeler ve teknikler Weft-faced compound plain weave Wool Plain Weave
Fiziksel açıklama Fragment from a mattress cover, woven in blue and red wool on a buff-coloured wool ground. The piece is in weft-faced compound weave. The design shows a range of typical patterns: diaper patterns of rosettes within octagons, quatrefoils within lozenges, and fret-ornament in blue; and curved leafy stems, zig-zag lines and geometrical ornament, in red. These patterns are arranged in horizontal bands, with plain stripes between.
Üslup Egyptian Late Antique
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
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