Fabric Design Before 1700s

Before 1700 – The Origins of Printed Fabrics

Long before the age of fashion, artisans across the world were already experimenting with printing on cloth. The earliest known block-printed textiles date back to India, China, and Egypt, where craftsmen carved motifs into wooden blocks, dipped them in natural dyes, and pressed them onto linen or cotton. Fragments found in Fustat, Egypt (9th–12th centuries) reveal imported Indian cottons printed in striking red, blue, and black—proof that textile printing was an established and widely traded art centuries before Europe adopted it.

By the 1300s, block printing had appeared in Central Europe, particularly in Germany, Switzerland, and France. Early European prints were typically made on linen and featured simple, repeating designs—vines, stars, flowers, and devotional emblems—using plant-based dyes such as woad, indigo, and madder.

These early printed textiles were the ancestors of the chintzes and cottons that would later sweep through 17th- and 18th-century Europe. They mark the beginning of a global exchange between East and West—where craftsmanship, trade, and imagination met to shape the first decorative fabrics that could be reproduced by hand rather than woven or embroidered one thread at a time.