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Strawberry Thief — Morris, framed
$137.00
Sale price
$137.00
Regular price
William Morris's 1883 textile pattern, taken from a Cooper Hewitt CC0 archive (cleaned and upscaled), framed and ready to hang.
Designed in 1883 at Merton Abbey — Morris's first successful indigo-discharge printed cotton. Named for the song thrushes that stole strawberries from the Morris family's kitchen garden, the pattern is more interested in the foragers than the fruit. The Arts & Crafts response to mechanised textile printing: hand-blocked, slow, deliberate.
This is reproduced from Cooper Hewitt's CC0 archive scan, cleanly upscaled to print at A1, on archival fine art paper, framed in solid wood.
THE PRINT
- 30×45 cm / 12×18", 40×60 cm / 16×24", or 60×90 cm / 24×36" in your choice of 4 solid wood frame colours, landscape orientation
- Archival giclée on 200gsm Enhanced Matte fine art paper, mounted under shatterproof acrylic glazing
- Printed and framed to order by our accredited partner
THE WORK
- Artist: William Morris (1834–1896)
- Year: 1883 (designed at Merton Abbey)
- Collection: Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum (CC0)
- Source: Cooper Hewitt Open Access · archive scan, upscaled
SHIPPING
- Free shipping worldwide
- Printed locally to you — no customs fees, no surprise charges at delivery
- Delivery estimate shown at checkout
Questions? Email us at theplainsight@hotmail.com.