William Morris Embossed Boxed Set of Notecards
Rachel Elizabeth Interiors & Textiles Pty Ltd


Price on Application – Enquiry
William Morris Embossed Boxed Notecards. One dozen cream-colored embossed 4 x 6 inch notecards (3 each of 4 designs) with white envelopes in a decorative box. Published with The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens.
Despite the rise of industrial manufacturing, William Morris believed in craftsmanship. Along with other leading painters, Morris (British, 1834–1896) founded what would become Morris & Company, producing decorative textiles and furnishings in a way that intimately linked artist and craftsman and returned to less mechanized methods of production. Though the company used newer aniline dyes, Morris attempted to revive the use of natural dyes such as indigo through discharge printing. His works are now considered exemplary of the Arts and Crafts movement and important to the development of Art Nouveau. The four Morris designs embossed on these notecards were part of larger patterns printed or woven on cotton, silk, or linen by Morris & Company.
Contains three each of the following notecards:
Kennet, c. 1883
Rose and Thistle, c. 1881
Tulip and Willow, c. 1873
Windrush, c. 1883
Despite the rise of industrial manufacturing, William Morris believed in craftsmanship. Along with other leading painters, Morris (British, 1834–1896) founded what would become Morris & Company, producing decorative textiles and furnishings in a way that intimately linked artist and craftsman and returned to less mechanized methods of production. Though the company used newer aniline dyes, Morris attempted to revive the use of natural dyes such as indigo through discharge printing. His works are now considered exemplary of the Arts and Crafts movement and important to the development of Art Nouveau. The four Morris designs embossed on these notecards were part of larger patterns printed or woven on cotton, silk, or linen by Morris & Company.
Contains three each of the following notecards:
Kennet, c. 1883
Rose and Thistle, c. 1881
Tulip and Willow, c. 1873
Windrush, c. 1883