What is sprigged muslin




















The labor behind that fabric and those dresses creates part of the dark understory of the Austen age…. The muslins available in fabric stores today are not at all like Regency-era fine muslin.

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It stayed on the high for long decades through Revolutions French, Industrial, and others in between , through rest and unrest, until a brilliant author, a poet, wrote a line evoking the weather of springtime he loved; the freshness of images, the brightness of light, the fragrance of rain showers, the excitement of eternal renewal, the pungent smell of ground and tufts of bright green new grasses on meadows where rivulets overflow….

I hope I helped you see the translucent fabric with small patterns of sprigs, and blossoms and their fragments, weaved into fabric by an accomplished artisan, to create the sprigged-muslin.

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April 28, Joe Ford. Table of Contents. There is much discussion in Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey about Catherine's "sprigged muslin robe with blue trimmings," perhaps resembling the dress in the illustration of the fictional Emma Corbett. Printing cotton was all about imitating more expensive fabrics so there was a large market for block-printed, sprigged muslin that imitated embroidered cotton. Fine muslin with printed sprigs from the Copp.

Collection at the Smithsonian Institution. We've discussed these cotton prints before in different categories. But the style terms are sprigged muslin or Indiennes. Ackermann's Repository showed "Muslin Patterns". Muslin to us is an inferior weave, but in the early days of cotton clothing in the West, muslin referred to a fine, light weave. It was often a synonym for cotton. This week we'll consider early prints in terms of styleNo one in Jane Austen's novels ever mentions a block-printed, cotton foulard, but sprigged muslins come up frequently.

Sprig refers to a simple, small floral"a sprig of lavender. Swatches of Indiennes, "Toilles de Cotton" imported through. The word Indiennes initially meant any printed cotton from India.



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