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Topics: Design

  • Finery for fashionable ladies

    When the first descriptions of knitting and crochet were published in Swedish, in the mid-19th century, such handiwork was described as the finest of all feminine handicrafts, for the benefit and pleasure alike of the trend-conscious, middle- and upper-class woman. Within a few decades, the patterns had moved into fashion journals. A new thesis examines how these changes affected handicrafts.

  • Vicke Lindstrand ‘at work’ in the first floor studio of his Kosta villa, 1954. Photo: Kulturparken Småland/Photo archives of Smålands museum.

    Booklaunch - Vicke Lindstrand On The Periphery

    Australian design historian Mark Ian Jones launches his new book Vicke Lindstrand On The Periphery- the first English language publication to examine the life and work of the Swedish artist and his place in Scandinavian design history. The author describes the image and reception of an artist and designer who didn’t “fit the mould” but has shown to be more influential than previously perceived.