Grade Range: K-12Resource Type(s): Primary Source, ArtifactsDate Posted: 3/5/2009
This embroidered mourning picture was embroidered in Lititz, Pennsylvania, about 1816, using silk thread, silk chenille, gold spangles, watercolor, and ink on silk fabric. In a gilded wood frame, it measured 25" x 25", and its black mat is reverse-painted on the glass. Mourning designs appear in many 19th-century decorative arts, including needlework. Embroidered landscapes, usually worked by schoolgirls, often show relatives or friends grieving before a monument dedicated to a lost loved one.
By the 1700s, samplers depicting alphabets and numerals were worked by young women to learn the b...
family, school, Pennsylvania, sewing, march, art, Women, religion, social history, nineteenth century, woman, domestic, 19th Century, girl, Women's History Month, education, death, 1800, Women's History, needlework