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FREE DESKTOP WALLPAPER
TO DOWNLOAD
We have prepared some William Morris's designs for you
to use as FREE Desktop Wallpaper on your PC .
Windows (Internet Explorer and Netscape)
Click on the wallpaper of your choice, open the picture and
right click, choose 'set as wallpaper' from the menu that appears.
| DAISY WALLPAPER
Designed by William Morris,
1864.
Morris designed two wallpapers, Daisy and Trellis, in the early
1860s when he was living at Red House. Both designs were registered
in February 1864 and the wallpapers were hand-printed for Morris
by Jeffrey & Company of Islington. The Daisy pattern was directly
inspired by a wall-hanging depicted in a 15th-century manuscript
of Froissarts Chronicles. Morris used similar clumps
of flowers for embroidery and tile designs of the 1860s. |
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WANDLE CHINTZ
Designed by William Morris,
1883-4.
Like a number of Morriss chintz patterns of the 1880s,
Wandle is named after a tributary of the river Thames, the Wandle
being the stream which flowed past the Morris & Company workshops
at Merton Abbey, Surrey. Morris began the design in September
1883, writing to his daughter Jenny that, although the wet
Wandle is not big but small, he wanted to make the pattern
very elaborate and splendid
to honour our helpful
stream. |
| MARIGOLD WALLPAPER
AND CHINTZ
Designed by William Morris,
1875.
The Marigold pattern was one of relatively few which Morris
used for both wallpapers and printed textiles. As a wallpaper,
the sinuous vertical meander is especially prominent, whereas
the pattern-structure is more subtly suggested in a draped textile
(e.g. as curtain fabric). Marigold was one of the first textiles
to be printed - on both cotton and silk - for Morris by Thomas
Wardle at his factory at Leek, Staffordshire. |
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BROTHER RABBIT
CHINTZ
Designed by William Morris,
1882.
The Brother Rabbit pattern was inspired, according to May Morris,
by the Uncle Remus stories which her father was reading
to the family at their Hammersmith home, Kelmscott House. It was
one of the first textiles to be printed at Merton Abbey, where
Morris & Co. moved its workshop premises at the end of 1881.
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