Procurator’s Velvet Stole, c. 1575- 1600. Creator: Unknown.

Procurator’s Velvet Stole, c. 1575- 1600. Creator: Unknown.

2-738-761 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Procurator’s Velvet Stole, c. 1575- 1600. Venetian law obliged senators to wear coloured textiles, in contrast to other male citizens, who wore black. The Procurator, a very high level government official, was required to wear a red stole, a cloth worn over one shoulder. So that it would read the same from front and back, the pattern reverses halfway, done by the weaver’s assistant on a drawloom. The line down the center is part of the original manufacture, enabling two stoles to be cut apart for use. The survival of an entire, uncut loom width is extremely rare. The velvet has two different heights of cut pile. The longer pile, which appears lighter, forms the pattern.


Image Details


Medium
  1. Dyed silk
  2. Velvet in two heights of cut pile (pile on pile, alto e basso), woven as two stole widths

Picture Type
  1. Velvet

Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 2586x5000
File Size : 37,881kb


Aliases

  1. 1942.829
  1. 122576
  1. 0940010207
  1. 1942.829
  1. 2-738-761
  1. 2738761

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