1780 Michelle de Bonneuil - Colourfull -Pillow Front
1780 Michelle de Bonneuil - Colourfull -Pillow Front
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Product Information
Product: Pillow front fabric panel
Material: Cotton Linen 220 gsm
Size: Approximately 45 × 45 cm
Design: Floral bouquets with ribbon garlands on green background
Period inspiration: 1780s rococo and early neoclassical furnishing textiles
Sew beautiful historical pillows for your home and bring a touch of late 18th-century elegance into your interior. The colourful floral ribbons and soft green background create a refined atmosphere inspired by manor houses, rococo salons, and cultivated European interiors.
Product Description
This decorative pillow front fabric is inspired by late 18th-century floral textiles associated with the elegant rococo and early neoclassical interiors of the 1780s. The design features delicate floral bouquets, twisting ribbon garlands, and small scattered blossoms arranged across a soft green background, creating a refined yet lively historical composition.
Printed on durable Cotton Linen 220 gsm, the fabric combines the natural texture of linen with the softness and versatility of cotton. The detailed floral arrangement and flowing ribbons reflect the fashionable furnishing textiles popular among aristocratic and cultivated interiors during the late 18th century.
Well suited for
Ideal for historical pillow fronts, decorative cushions, manor house interiors, historical sewing projects, period-inspired home décor, museum-inspired furnishing details, and elegant upholstery accents. Also suitable for romantic cottage interiors and French rococo inspired decorating.
Design & Historical Context
During the 1780s, floral furnishing fabrics with ribbon motifs became highly fashionable across European interiors, particularly among the aristocracy and upper bourgeoisie. Delicate bouquets, asymmetrical compositions, and decorative garlands reflected the softer aesthetic language of the late rococo period while gradually moving toward neoclassical refinement.
The name Michelle de Bonneuil references the sophisticated social world of late 18th-century France, where fashion, interiors, textiles, and cultivated elegance formed an important part of aristocratic visual culture.
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