The Diligent Needle The Diligent Needle
  • Home
    • Acknowledgements
  • Diligence
    • Specimens of Needlework
    • Sewing exercises
    • Darning sampler
    • Linen shirt
    • Handkerchief
    • Sampler
      • Portrait of Mary Elizabeth Hiester
    • Canvaswork picture
    • Whitework sampler
  • Profit
    • Quilted petticoat
    • Advertisements
    • Rebozo
    • Bedcover medallion
    • The Ascension of Christ
    • Mantle
    • Catalogue of Art Needlework of Quality
  • Pleasure
    • Bedcover center
    • Embroidered waistcoat
    • Embroidered bedcover
    • Hearth rug
    • Needlework picture
  • Ornament
    • Work bag
    • Petticoat border
    • Embroidered pockets
    • Canvaswork fire screen
    • Plush stitch cushion cover
    • Embroidered chair cover
    • Table cover
    • Crewelwork picture
      • Crewelwork placemats
  • Home
    • Acknowledgements
  • Diligence
    • Specimens of Needlework
    • Sewing exercises
    • Darning sampler
    • Linen shirt
    • Handkerchief
    • Sampler
      • Portrait of Mary Elizabeth Hiester
    • Canvaswork picture
    • Whitework sampler
  • Profit
    • Quilted petticoat
    • Advertisements
    • Rebozo
    • Bedcover medallion
    • The Ascension of Christ
    • Mantle
    • Catalogue of Art Needlework of Quality
  • Pleasure
    • Bedcover center
    • Embroidered waistcoat
    • Embroidered bedcover
    • Hearth rug
    • Needlework picture
  • Ornament
    • Work bag
    • Petticoat border
    • Embroidered pockets
    • Canvaswork fire screen
    • Plush stitch cushion cover
    • Embroidered chair cover
    • Table cover
    • Crewelwork picture
      • Crewelwork placemats

Petticoat border

Detail of embroidery featuring two birds, a squirrel, and large flowers.
Detail of needlework featuring a deer and rooster, a squirrel , a tree, and flowers.

These colorful crewelwork scenes were once a border that decorated the hem of a petticoat, which in the 1700s was the term for a skirt, not an undergarment. Relatively few petticoats survive intact, but those ornamented with quilting or embroidery were quite fashionable in New England between about 1740 and 1760. Unfortunately, early collectors and dealers often valued the needlework more highly than the article of clothing and cut off the embroidery, framed it for display, and discarded the rest of the petticoat.  

 

Fragments of a petticoat border
Made in New England; 1740‒60
Wool on linen
1961.1696, .1697 Gift of Henry Francis du Pont
1965.3076, .3077 Bequest of Henry Francis du Pont

Needlework has historically been central to a young woman’s education. The Diligent Needle: Instrument of Profit, Pleasure, and Ornament features the plain and fancy sewing of skilled women.

This exhibition was curated by Linda Eaton and was on view in the Winterthur Galleries from August 2014 to July 2015.

 

 

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