Textiles

The 50,000 objects in the textile collections fall into two main categories: raw fibers, yarns, and fabrics, and machines, tools, and other textile technology. Shawls, coverlets, samplers, laces, linens, synthetics, and other fabrics are part of the first group, along with the 400 quilts in the National Quilt Collection. Some of the Museum's most popular artifacts, such as the Star-Spangled Banner and the gowns of the first ladies, have an obvious textile connection.

The machinery and tools include spinning wheels, sewing machines, thimbles, needlework tools, looms, and an invention that changed the course of American agriculture and society. A model of Eli Whitney's cotton gin, made by the inventor in the early 1800s, shows the workings of a machine that helped make cotton plantations profitable in the South and encouraged the spread of slavery.

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Location
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ID Number
TE.T13163
catalog number
T13163.000
accession number
250794
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Location
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ID Number
2013.0121.34
accession number
2013.0121
catalog number
2013.0121.34
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Location
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ID Number
TE.E372209B
catalog number
E372209.00B
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Location
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date made
1st quarter, 19th century
ID Number
TE.T11812C
catalog number
T11812.00C
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Location
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ID Number
TE.E317231
catalog number
E317231.000
accession number
67438
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Location
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ID Number
TE.T16037
catalog number
T16037.000
accession number
297965
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ID Number
TE.E317239
catalog number
E317239.000
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Location
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ID Number
TE.T13870
catalog number
T13870.000
embroidery on knotted net background, stitches: satin, stem and buttonhole. Rose motifs. Round center of fine woven Piña clothCurrently not on view
Description
embroidery on knotted net background, stitches: satin, stem and buttonhole. Rose motifs. Round center of fine woven Piña cloth
Location
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ID Number
TE.E373965
catalog number
E373965.000
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Location
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ID Number
1984.0111.158
accession number
1984.0111
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Location
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date made
3rd quarter, 19th century
ID Number
TE.T12021C
catalog number
T12021.00C
accession number
202257
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Location
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ID Number
TE.T13080.00B
catalog number
T13080.00B
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Location
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ID Number
TE.T13952A
catalog number
T13952.00A
accession number
267746
ID Number
TE.T09633
accession number
172665
catalog number
T09633
Printed lace pattern, named Pattern No. 6. Sold by Sara Hadley, New York. Only the dots are printed, not the little numbers indicating the sequence of working the pattern. This pattern has not been used.Currently not on view
Description (Brief)
Printed lace pattern, named Pattern No. 6. Sold by Sara Hadley, New York. Only the dots are printed, not the little numbers indicating the sequence of working the pattern. This pattern has not been used.
Location
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date made
1903
ID Number
2016.0048.09F
accession number
2016.0048
catalog number
2016.0048.09F
Duplan Silk Corporation Silk crepe fabric sample; 1921. Figured crepe meteor. Woven at Duplan's Hazelton, Pa. mill. All silk crepe weave fabric with a fine twilled, satin-like face.
Description
Duplan Silk Corporation Silk crepe fabric sample; 1921. Figured crepe meteor. Woven at Duplan's Hazelton, Pa. mill. All silk crepe weave fabric with a fine twilled, satin-like face. The large allover, leaf-like Jacquard figure is produced in a crepe de chine weave, the dull, matte surface of which stands out very clearly by contrast with the lustrous surface of the background. Color is Lagoon (medium blue-green). Punctures are visible throughout fabric. A sample has been taken from the corner with pinking scissors.
Jean Leopold Duplan, a French businessman, founded Duplan Silk Company in New York in 1898 as an extension of his silk weaving plant in Lyons, France. The 1897 American tariff spurred Duplan to supply the American silk market with domestically made cloth. Duplan Silk began producing artificial silk (now known as rayon) as early as 1911. The lustrous artificial silk was spun from cellulose and a gelatin extracted from seaweed. Duplan himself was quite secretive about the artificial silk production process, keeping the looms in a separate, boarded section of the mill. Eventually, Duplan Silk produced silk velvets, formulated its own dyes, and printed fabrics in its own mill.
Location
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Date made
1921
ID Number
TE.T04255.000
accession number
66772
catalog number
T04255.000
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ID Number
TE.T13387B
catalog number
T13387.00B
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ID Number
TE.T13448
catalog number
T13448.000
accession number
254848
Dress Decoration. Chantilly bobbin lace motif with five leaves held by a bowCurrently not on view
Description (Brief)
Dress Decoration. Chantilly bobbin lace motif with five leaves held by a bow
Location
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date made
late 19th/early 20th century
ID Number
TE.H34230A
catalog number
H34230A
accession number
71118
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Location
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patent date
1868-08-04
inventor
Goodwin, Lizzie C.
Stockwell, Ira H.
ID Number
TE.T11416.054
catalog number
T11416.054
patent number
80,781
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Location
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ID Number
1984.0111.065
accession number
1984.0111
ID Number
TE.T09529
accession number
172295
catalog number
T09529
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ID Number
TE.T14012.000
catalog number
T14012.000
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Location
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ID Number
TE.E300673C
catalog number
E300673.00C
accession number
61587

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