Chintz

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Chintz is calico cloth printed with flowers and other devices in different colours. The word Chintz is Hindi and derived from the Sanskrit "chitra" which means many-coloured or speckled, originally from India.

Chintz was originally a painted or stained calico produced in India from 1600 to 1800 and popular for bed covers, quilts and draperies. Around 1600, Portuguese and Dutch traders were bringing examples of Indian chintz into Europe. These early fabrics were extremely expensive and rare. By 1680 more than a million pieces of chintz were being imported into England per year, and a similar quantity was going to France and Holland. With imported chintz becoming so popular with Europeans during the late 1600's, French and English mills grew concerned, as they could not make chintz. In 1686 the French declared a ban on all chintz imports. In 1720 England's Parliament enacted a law that forbid "the Use and Warings in Apparel of imported chintz, and also its use or Wear in or about any Bed, Chair, Cushion or other Household furniture".

Even thought chintz was outlawed, there were loopholes in the legislation. The Court of Versailles was outside the law and fashionable young courtesans continued wearing chintz. In 1734, French naval officer, M. de Beaulieu, who was stationed in Pondicherry, India, sent home letters along with actual samples of chintz fabric during each stage of the process to a chemist friend detailing the dyeing process of cotton chintz. His letters and samples can be seen today in the Musee' Nationale d'Histore Naturelle in Paris.

Another Frenchman, Father Coeurdoux also supplied details of the chintz making process, in 1742, while he was trying to convert the Indians to Catholicism. In 1759 the ban against chintz was lifted. By this time French and English mills were able to produce chintz.

Europeans at first produced reproductions of Indian designs, and later added original patterns. A well-known make was toile de Jouy, which was manufactured in Jouy, France between 1700 and 1843.

Modern chintz usually consists of bright overall floral patterns printed on a light background.

Chintz is also pottery covered with a dense, all-over pattern of flowers or, less often, other objects. The pattern is applied by transfer printing as opposed to the more traditional method of painting by hand. The main firms making chintz——Grimwades (trade name Royal Winton), A.G. Richardson & Co. (trade name Crown Ducal), James Kent Ltd., Shelley Potteries Ltd., and Elijah Cotton Ltd. (trade name Lord Nelson)——were English and turned out a great variety of chintz dinnerware, teaware, and ornamental pieces mostly in the 1920s-50s.

In contemporary language the word "chintz" and "chintzy" can be used to refer to clothing or furnishings which are vulgar or showy in appearance.

[edit] Books on ceramic chintz

  • Eileen Rose Busby, Royal Winton Porcelain: Ceramics Fit for a King, Antique Publishers, 1998.
  • Susan Scott, The Charlton Standard Catalogue of Chintz, 3rd ed. Charlton Press, 1999.
  • Kelly L. Moran, Shelley Chintz: Unlocking the Secrets of the Pattern Books, Thaxted Cottage, 1999, ISBN 0967692504.
  • Jo Anne P. Welsh, Chintz Ceramics, 3rd ed., Schiffer Publishing, 2000.
  • Francis Joseph Publications, The Chintz Collectors Handbook, 1999.
  • Muriel M. Miller, Collecting Royal Winton Chintz, Francis Joseph Publications, 1996.

[edit] External links

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