Cloth that Changed the World The Art and Fashion of Indian Chintz Sarah Fee
- Price: £35.00
- Add to Basket
Share this page:
- Format:
- Hardback
- Publication date:
- 11 Feb 2020
- ISBN:
- 9780300246797
- Imprint:
- Other Distribution
- Dimensions:
- 312 pages: 305 x 229mm
- Illustrations:
- 300 color illus.
- Sales territories:
- World
Categories:
The story of India’s exuberantly colored textiles that made their mark on design, technology, and trade around the world
Chintz, a type of multicolored printed or painted cotton cloth, originated in India yet exerted influence far beyond its home shores: it became a driving force of the spice trade in the East Indies, and it attracted European merchants, who by the 17th century were importing millions of pieces. In the 18th century, Indian chintz became so coveted globally that Europeans attempted to imitate its uniquely vibrant dyes and design—a quest that eventually sparked the mechanical and business innovations that ushered in the Industrial Revolution, with its far-reaching societal impacts.
This beautifully illustrated book tells the fascinating and multidisciplinary stories of the widespread desire for Indian chintz over 1,000 years to its latest resurgence in modern fashion and home design. Based on the renowned Indian chintz collections held at the Royal Ontario Museum, the book showcases the genius of Indian chintz makers and the dazzling variety of works they have created for specialized markets: religious and court banners for India, monumental gilded wall hangings for elite homes in Europe and Thailand, luxury women’s dress for England, sacred hangings for ancestral ceremonies in Indonesia, and today’s runways of Lakme Fashion Week in Mumbai.
Chintz, a type of multicolored printed or painted cotton cloth, originated in India yet exerted influence far beyond its home shores: it became a driving force of the spice trade in the East Indies, and it attracted European merchants, who by the 17th century were importing millions of pieces. In the 18th century, Indian chintz became so coveted globally that Europeans attempted to imitate its uniquely vibrant dyes and design—a quest that eventually sparked the mechanical and business innovations that ushered in the Industrial Revolution, with its far-reaching societal impacts.
This beautifully illustrated book tells the fascinating and multidisciplinary stories of the widespread desire for Indian chintz over 1,000 years to its latest resurgence in modern fashion and home design. Based on the renowned Indian chintz collections held at the Royal Ontario Museum, the book showcases the genius of Indian chintz makers and the dazzling variety of works they have created for specialized markets: religious and court banners for India, monumental gilded wall hangings for elite homes in Europe and Thailand, luxury women’s dress for England, sacred hangings for ancestral ceremonies in Indonesia, and today’s runways of Lakme Fashion Week in Mumbai.
Sarah Fee is senior curator of Eastern Hemisphere fashion and textiles at the Royal Ontario Museum.
“Scholarly yet sumptuous”—Crafts Magazine
“[A]n intriguing and fascinating narrative through centuries of trade, artistry, politics and culture drawn from the threads of this classic cloth”—Embroidery magazine
“Cloth That Changed the World offers a beautiful catalogue of the Royal Ontario Museum’s exceptional collection alongside diverse, authoritative texts.”—Avalon Fotheringham, Journal of the Oriental Rug and Textile Society of Great Britain
“[A]n intriguing and fascinating narrative through centuries of trade, artistry, politics and culture drawn from the threads of this classic cloth”—Embroidery magazine
“Cloth That Changed the World offers a beautiful catalogue of the Royal Ontario Museum’s exceptional collection alongside diverse, authoritative texts.”—Avalon Fotheringham, Journal of the Oriental Rug and Textile Society of Great Britain
-
Dandy Style
Shaun Cole£25.00 -
The Bloomsbury Look
Wendy Hitchmough£30.00 -
Fur
Jonathan Faiers£40.00 -
The Rose in Fashion
Amy de la Haye£30.00 -
About Time
Andrew Bolton£50.00 -
The Pocket
Barbara Burman£19.99 -
Back in Fashion
Giorgio Riello£35.00 -
Tudor Textiles
Eleri Lynn£35.00 -
The Age of Undress
Amelia Rauser£35.00 -
Marie Cuttoli
Cindy Kang£35.00 -
Stuart Style
Maria Hayward£45.00 -
In Pursuit of Fashion
Andrew Bolton£35.00 -
Off the Wall
Dilys E. Blum£35.00 -
Dress in the Age of Jane Austen
Hilary Davidson£30.00 -
French Fashion, Women, and the First World War
Maude Bass-Krueger£50.00 -
Zandra Rhodes
Dennis Nothdruft£30.00 -
Fashion and Politics
Djurdja Bartlett£35.00 -
CAMP
Andrew Bolton£35.00 -
Weaving Modernism
K. L. H. Wells£50.00