Following the huge success of its Colours of England range of paints,
Little Greene has once again joined forces with English Heritage to
produce a book of archive inspired wallpapers: London Wallpapers.
Comprising 47 colour-ways over eight designs, each wallpaper has been
inspired by historical documents in the English Heritage archive. Spanning
the years between 1760 and 1890, the papers were originally manufactured
in London to decorate smart city and country homes, and each design has a
provenance tracing it back to the original house in which it was
discovered.
Little Greene's aim is to bring these archive designs back to life,
re-interpreting them in a way that makes them suitable for use in the 21st
Century.
The range includes:
Soho Square: -
a reproduction of a silk damask fabric.
The original paper was a strongly patterned crimson flock on pink ground.
It was, somewhat unusually, used to paper the entire first floor of
a Soho Square household. circa 1775.
 
Craven St.: -
A late 19th Century machine-made design,
discovered in a row of Georgian terraced houses in Craven Street. The
original paper may have been produced in a wallpaper factory off Liverpool
Road in Islington, the last bastion of wallpaper production in
London. circa 1885

Broadwick St.: -
Found in a row of elegant early 18th
Century houses in Broadwick Street, Soho, this design is remarkable in
that it was based on a botanically accurate reproduction of a plant,
Clusia Rosea, first recorded in a famous book the Natural History of
Carolina, Florida and the Bahama Islands in 1743. circa 1775.

St. James Place -
Discovered in the first floor
entertaining room of a house in the fashionable St James Place,
Piccadilly, the original design was produced in strong crimson flock with
white highlights. circa 1760

Great Ormond St.: -
A colourful parrot motif, closely
based upon one of a multi-layered group of papers removed from the ground
floor rear closet of a very early 18th Century terraced house opposite the
Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital. This design was subsequently
machine-made on cellulose paper in the late 19th Century. circa 1890.

Cranford: -
This mid 18th Century paper, found at
Cranford, Middlesex, has a yellow floral ogee motif printed onto thick
hand-made rag paper. It is unusual because yellow, although a popular
colour, was expensive and prone to fading. circa 1765.

Albemarle St.: -
Reminiscent of Spitalfields silks, this
paper, found in Albemarle Street, off Piccadilly, had an enormous pattern
repeat of 6 feet. Originally produced in dark blue flock on a light
background, it was unusual to find so bold and expensive a paper used in a
low-ceilinged second floor bedroom. Such grand paper would have been
designed to have been on show - more often in a downstairs reception room.
circa 1760.

Bayham Abbey: -
Whilst the original fragment was
discovered at Bayham Abbey on the Sussex-Kent border, the paper is likely
to have been produced in London. On a red ground reminiscent of a gothic
style, the original paper was made from cellulose wood pulp and machine
printed. circa 1880

This exciting new range is available through Fabric Gallery and Interiors.
Come into our shop to see these wallpapers.
Call us for more information and competitive pricing. We can deliver
throughout the UK direct to your home or office.
Be the first to get this exciting new wallpaper.
Call Fabric Gallery and Interiors for prices and availability or call
into our shop near York.
Fabric Gallery and Interiors
13 York Street
Dunnington
YORK
YO19 5PN
Or contact us at: 
Fabric Gallery and
Interiors.
Call us now:
01904 481101 (shop
open Mon-Sat)
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