Costume and Textiles Quilt Facing 17th - 19th century Artist/maker unknown, Turkish Linen plain weave with silk embroidery in surface darning stitch Currently not on view 1877-18 Purchased with Museum funds, 1877 |
LabelDuring the Ottoman Empire, embroidered textiles were made by men in professional workshops and by women in the women's quarters of houses. A quilt facing (yorgan yüzü), part of the bedding in a well-to-do Ottoman household, would have been tacked to the top of a quilt so it could be easily removed. This example is constructed from three joined loom-widths of fabric that were embroidered before being assembled. The pattern of a pomegranate flanked by two large serrated leaves is worked in a darning stitch over three threads. The composition's central field and border typifies Ottoman embroideries from the seventeenth to eighteenth centuries. |















