Embroidered towel, 1800s. Creator: Unknown.

Embroidered towel, 1800s. Creator: Unknown.

2-728-095 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Embroidered towel, 1800s. Fine Turkish towels with beautiful floral decoration embroidered across each end are often reversible, and their quality revealed the owner’s wealth and status. A lady was required by Turkish etiquette to use a napkin "daintily over the tips of her fingers," lest she lose her social standing. Towels were not only essential components of everyday life but also gifts, prizes, and decorations. Embroideries could also depict images of daily life. Colorful tents and buildings in floral landscapes, here enriched with shiny gilt-metal strips, adorn the four sides of a head scarf that was worn either folded or unfolded and fastened beneath the chin. Square embroideries also served to wrap gifts, letters, and objects; the 19th-century English traveler Charles White commented that "no present is made . . . unless folded in a handkerchief, embroidered cloth, or piece of gauze. The more rich the envelope, the higher the compliment to the receiver."


Image Details


Medium
  1. Embroidery, double-running stitch: silk, gilt-metal strips and thread
  2. Plain weave: linen

Picture Type
  1. Embroidery

Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 5669x7397
File Size : 122,853kb


Aliases

  1. 1916.1251
  1. 95518
  1. 0940000994
  1. 1916.1251
  1. 2-728-095
  1. 2728095


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