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1820 Laura Ingersoll - Dark

1820 Laura Ingersoll - Dark

Regular price 281.00 SEK
Regular price Sale price 281.00 SEK
Unit price 281.00 kr  per  m
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Design reference nr:

SKU:48500247

1820s Printed Cotton – Stylised Floral Swag Design

Product Description

This lively early 19th-century print features flowing decorative swags combined with stylised floral bursts, curling leaves, and delicate branching botanical details arranged across a soft beige ground. The richly ornamented composition creates elegant movement throughout the fabric while maintaining the light rhythmic balance typical of fashionable printed cottons from the 1820s.

The vivid palette of soft pink, turquoise blue, olive green, warm yellow, and muted lavender gives the textile a cheerful yet refined romantic character. The swirling garland-like forms and fountain-inspired floral motifs reflect the decorative elegance popular during the late Regency and transitional early Romantic period.

The design recalls lightweight printed cotton day dresses of the 1820s, where gathered bodices, piped collars, long sleeves, and softly flowing skirts were combined with expressive ornamental fabrics that brought movement and personality to everyday fashion.

Perfect for:

  • 1820s gathered day dresses and wrappers
  • Regency back-closing gowns (c. 1815–1825)
  • Spencer jackets and short Regency jackets
  • Banyans and informal historical robes
  • Aprons and historical dress accessories
  • Lightweight cotton gowns with soft gathered silhouettes




Laura Ingersoll (1775–1868) was born in Massachusetts and moved to Upper Canada with her Loyalist family. During the War of 1812, she overheard American plans for a surprise attack on British troops at Beaver Dams. Despite being a mother of six, she bravely walked about 32 kilometers through difficult terrain to warn the British. Her information helped the British and Indigenous allies defeat the Americans. Though not widely recognized during her life, she later became a Canadian symbol of courage and patriotism, with many places named after her and her story taught in schools. 
She is more known as Laura Secord ...

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