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By Jaima Brown with S.A.
Maxwell www.samaxwell.com

Blue and white images of birds fluttering
among flowered branches seem etched
in ink against a cream-colored
background in this toile from the Kenilworth
collection from S.A.
Maxwell Co.'s Patricia Kent Studio.
(ARA) - Toile, the subtly elegant
printing technique that tells stories in engraving-like detail, traveled
a fascinating history of its own to become the enduring favorite of
designers, decorators and homeowners everywhere.
Toile, pronounced twal, is an abbreviation of toile de Jouy. The name
comes from Jouy-en-Josas, France, where the first plant to commercially
produce this type of printing was established in 1760. The initial toile
was a monotone, one-color print, rendered in intricate, engraving-like
detail on a white or cream-colored background.
Typically, the images were scenes that told a story. Drawings might
retell a myth about Roman gods, or chronicle ships' sailing adventures,
or simply depict days in the life of a French farming family.
The triumph of toile as today's decorative darling is far from simple,
however. When Christopher-Philippe Oberkampf opened a print shop in
France in 1760, reverse images for toile prints were carved into wooden
blocks. Ink was applied to the blocks and then transferred by hand to
un-dyed cotton. Only the rich and the royal, including Louis XVI, could
afford the results of this painstaking process.
Later, in a stunning example of industrial espionage, Oberkampf
discovered in England the secrets of etching designs onto a copper-plate
roller. He and his brothers wrote the directions for this process on
cotton percale fabric, using an alum solution tinted with red dye, and
then dipped the fabric in vinegar to render the writing invisible until
after they crossed the Channel. By utilizing their stolen information,
the Oberkampfs significantly expanded both their market and their fame.
Napoleon himself bestowed on them the Legion of Honor.
Still later, in an unrelated but ironic twist of fate, British troops
destroyed Oberkampf's factory in Jouy-en-Josas. Brokenhearted, the
printmaker died shortly afterwards.
Today, toile triumphs, but only the engraving-like quality of the
printing method remains true to its original. It is not uncommon for
contemporary toiles to be printed in more than one color and appear on a
colored background. The themes now encompass just about any subject that
strikes a wallpaper or fabric designer's fancy.
An exotic combination of parrots, pineapples and palm fronds, for
example, grace a tropical pattern in the Vintage Tuscany wallpaper and
border collection from S.A. Maxwell Co.'s LV Emmert Studio. This theme
enhances all design styles, from contemporary to traditional, and is
especially well suited to today's popular bamboo and Oriental
furnishings. It exemplifies toile's ease of use in all settings.
A more traditional toile appears in Winnetka, another collection from L
V Emmert. This features a classic repeat of laurel leaves, each
underscoring etched renderings of a rooster and other French country
scenes. The slightly crackled background adds the patina of age.
In another toile, small birds flutter among flower-bedecked boughs, all
in a blue and white pattern that looks as if it were etched in ink on a
rich, cream-colored background. This is from Kenilworth, a collection
from Maxwell's Patricia Kent Studio, and was based on a document antique
fabric pattern.
Because toile patterns can make an elegant design statement all by
themselves or provide a unifying backdrop for other patterns in a room,
we include at least one toile in many S.A. Maxwell collections. On
wallpaper, the simplicity of images, rendered in the characteristic
etched form of a toile, brings pattern to a wall without interfering
with other design elements.
From a distance, toiles first emerge as a pleasing overall background
design. On closer look, as these subtle images come into focus, they
engage the onlooker and become as interesting as an engraved art print.
Few other design techniques can accomplish the dual role of creating
both an unobtrusive, elegantly discreet setting for all of the objects
and furnishings in a room, and, at the same time, lend distinctive,
standalone art to that interior.
Try on a toile by locating a retailer that carries the Vintage Tuscany
and Winnetka collections from the L V Emmert Studio division of S.A.
Maxwell Co., or Kenilworth from Maxwell's Patricia Kent Studio. To find
the retailer nearest you, call 847-932-3700 or visit
www.samaxwell.com
on the Internet.
Courtesy of ARA Content
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