
The ” Verdure Ferrières ” tapestry was originally woven around 1718 in Brussels by the Reydams workshops. Like Aubusson, it illustrates the tradition of wooded landscapes, sometimes evoking parks. These wall tapestries were used as winter gardens in castles and bourgeois homes. The cartoons were created by painters such as Luc Achtsllinck and Augustin Coppens, landscape artists of the 17th and 18th centuries.
This tapestry is woven on a Jacquard loom in France, in Loiselles stitch. It is made of cotton with a very fine relief.
The “Verdure Ferrières” tapestry was originally woven around 1718 in Brussels, by the Reydams workshops. Like Aubusson, it illustrates the tradition of wooded landscapes, sometimes evoking parks. These wall tapestries were used in winter gardens in castles and bourgeois houses. The cartoons were created by painters such as Luc Achtsllinck and Augustin Coppens, 17th and 18th century landscape artists.
Here, this tapestry is woven on a Jacquard loom, in France, in Loiselles stitch. It is made of cotton with a very fine relief.
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16th-century


Tapestry The King's

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