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Few things are more quintessentially British than a William Morris print. The flora and fauna, inspired by English gardens and hedgerows, are unmistakable. From curtains to wallpaper, no country ...
William and May Morris were part of an art movement called Arts and Crafts. Throughout her lifetime May designed wallpaper ... Red, yellow, blue, blue, yellow, red. I have to concentrate, but ...
What could be more quintessentially English than William Morris ... red and blue tulip heads of a 17th-century Ottoman quilt fragment he owned. The composition of his block-printed wallpaper ...
William died in 1896, and the Morris ... Blue Fruit lined the walls, while in the latter, a darker colorway of William’s Daisy pattern (detected by a slit of color underneath the preexisting ...
While the noted Arts and Crafts designer’s patterns have never gone out of production, they are enjoying a resurgence in popularity. A leading figure of the British Arts and Crafts movement ...
William Morris (1834-96 ... now recreated with its heavy fringe trim. The wallpaper was a Morris design but the much more colourful Blue Fruit, specially hand-printed from the original wooden ...