Tab from a banner with circles containing a diamond-shape
Details
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Title
Tab from a banner with circles containing a diamond-shape
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Associated place
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Date
late 13th century - early 14th century
Mamluk Period (1250 - 1517) -
Material and technique
linen, with white linen appliqué; needle-woven openwork in flax; with stitching in flax
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Material index
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Technique index
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Object type
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Dimensions
25.5 x 16.5 cm (length x width)
along length/width 24 / 24 threads/cm (thread count)
ground fabric 0.04 cm max. (thread diameter)
ground fabric 0.02 cm min. (thread diameter)
additional fabric 0.03 cm (thread diameter) -
No. of items
1
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Credit line
Presented by Professor Percy Newberry, 1941.
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Museum location
Museum department
Eastern Art
Accession no.
EA1984.134
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Catalogue text
A tab with white appliqué on a white ground, showing two complete and four partial circles, each containing a diamond.
The top of the tab has eight pairs of open string worked with needle weaving, to connect to an additional narrow band of plain fabric. The open work was probably made to allow for a band to be laced through, possibly for tieing up the tab. See also EA1984.35.In: Ellis, Marianne, Embroideries and Samplers from Islamic Egypt (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, in association with Greenville: Curious Works Press, 2001)
The type of appliqué or applied work on this tab is sometimes called ‘onlay’ patchwork. The technique has been practiced in Cairo for hundreds of years, especially for tents and hangings, and work continues to this day in the street of the tentmakers near Bab al-Zuwayla. The top layer of fabric is like a frame, with half and quarter circle shapes cut from one piece of fabric and stitched to the backing. Two circles enclosing diamond shapes were then applied individually to the background fabric and small Z shapes and central diamonds added to complete the design. The diamond shapes are emblems representing the napkin of the master of the robes, signifying that the tab once decorated an amir’s accoutrements.
The construction of openwork bars along the top of the tab is different from those forming a lattice above the pair of tabs, No. 51 [EA1984.35]. Instead of inserting a strip of linen and withdrawing the weft threads, here the worker fastened long threads between a band of fabric and the top of the tab and then needlewove them into pairs of bars. This would have allowed cords to be slotted through the holes.In: Barnes, Ruth and Marianne Ellis, ‘The Newberry Collection of Islamic Embroideries’, 4 vols, 2001, Oxford, Ashmolean Museum
Further reading
Barnes, Ruth and Marianne Ellis, ‘The Newberry Collection of Islamic Embroideries’, 4 vols, 2001, Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, vol. ii, vol. i p. 16 n. 3, vol. i
Ellis, Marianne, Embroideries and Samplers from Islamic Egypt (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, in association with Greenville: Curious Works Press, 2001), no. 52 on p. 76, illus. p. 77
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