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Warner Textile Archive

Coordinates: 51°52′34″N 0°33′07″E / 51.876°N 0.552°E / 51.876; 0.552
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Warner Textile Archive source: Oxyman, geograph.org.uk

The Warner Textile Archive is a UK-based collection of textiles, designs and paper records operated by Braintree District Museum Trust. It opened in 1993 and is the second largest collection of publicly-owned textiles in the UK (after the Victoria & Albert Museum).[1]

Based in Braintree, Essex the Archive consists of some 100,000 items representing the creative and commercial legacy of Warner & Sons, a leading textile manufacturer that operated from Braintree throughout much of the twentieth century.[1][2]

The Warner Textile Archive is housed in part of the original mill building at Silks Way, Braintree, and maintains a publicly accessible gallery along with rotating public exhibitions.[1]

Warner & Sons was a leading manufacturer of silk and velvet, as well as producing a wide range of other woven fabrics. Notably, it created the Queen's coronation robes and silk hangings used in Westminster Abbey during the coronation ceremony.[3] Representing two centuries of UK textile manufacturing history, the archive features work by artists/designers such as Augustus Pugin, William Morris, Vanessa Bell, Marianne Straub, Hans Tisdall, Lynton Lamb and Graham Sutherland.[1][2] The Warner archive was conserved for many years by the wallpaper and fabric company Walker Greenbank which sold the collection to Braintree in 2004.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Warner Textile Archive, Braintree District Museum Essex". thegulbenkianprize.org.uk. Gulbenkian Prize. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  2. ^ a b "The Warner Archive by various, c1790-c1990". artfund.org. Artfund. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  3. ^ staff (8 April 2010). "The Warner Silk Mill in Braintree". Essex Life. Retrieved 22 July 2014.
  4. ^ "History".

51°52′34″N 0°33′07″E / 51.876°N 0.552°E / 51.876; 0.552