SKU: 3081-66

Towel roller blind fabric red

EUR29.35

Available in central stock
Quick facts

Additional information

Weight 0.22 kg
Length

75 cm

Width

50 cm

Towel made of roller blind fabric.

The model for this rustic fabric, which is woven especially for Gysinge, comes from a farm in Hälsingland and dates from the early 1800s.The roller blind fabrics are woven with a shuttle in old-fashioned looms and therefore have smooth, fine and strong selvedges, which do not need to be hemmed or cut.

This fabric is a quality product that gets more and more beautiful the more you use it and wash it.

Coarse linen fabric. Cypress technique. The towels have loops at both ends.

Description

Towel made of roller blind fabric.

The model for this rustic fabric, which is woven especially for Gysinge, comes from a farm in Hälsingland and dates from the early 1800s.The roller blind fabrics are woven with a shuttle in old-fashioned looms and therefore have smooth, fine and strong selvedges, which do not need to be hemmed or cut.

This fabric is a quality product that gets more and more beautiful the more you use it and wash it.

Additional information

Weight 0.22 kg
Length

75 cm

Width

50 cm

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Washing instructions:

Shrinks up to 9 percent.

Machine wash at least 60 degrees.

Use detergents without bleach.

Hang the fabric fairly wet, so it will be easier to iron.

It is best to cold-iron the fabric when it is slightly damp, or iron it with a steam iron.

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An end cap is included.

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Use a screwdriver instead of a screwdriver.

Screw not included.

Matching screw number 9 for the bolt and screw number 19 for the end plate

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Screw hook nickel-plated small

Turn-of-the-century screw hook made of solid nickel-plated brass with iron screw part. Common in the past as a clothes hook in rooms and hallways, as a towel rack in kitchens, etc.

Also available in brass. See related products.

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Towel unbleached

The traditional kitchen and toilet towel in “poor man’s suit” in classic white, blue, unbleached and red.

50% cotton, 50% linen of bleached quality with elements of bleached and unbleached yarn.

Shrinks about 7% on first wash. Machine wash recommended, preferably 90 degrees after heavy soiling, otherwise 40 or 60 degrees. Can be ironed or mangled. As towels, it is sufficient to hang them smooth after washing and then fold them. Stains are removed with linseed oil soap. Sold as towels in four different colors and as white napkins.

The towels from Gysinge have an interesting history. Until the 1980s, Gysinge was a nursing home run by the county council. To create employment for the 60 or so mentally ill people who stayed at the home, there was, among other things, a weaving room. Many of the inmates spent a long time in the weaving room, which gave them a more meaningful existence – and the county council a cash injection. At the home, real fabrics were woven, not therapy work in the modern, negative sense. For example, all the curtains, tablecloths and napkins were woven for the reopening of Gysinge Manor in the 1960s. This towel fabric is a so-called sieve weave (the pattern looks like a sieve – but only appears after washing!), woven to order for a guesthouse in Järvsö in the 60s. The weaving method is also called poor man’s cloth, a weaving method that produced a fabric that looks much more exclusive than it really is. The weaving method is very old and produces a highly absorbent and durable fabric, which has always been used for towels and tablecloths. The fabric is most beautiful if you mangle it, then the shiny linen threads in the weft are emphasized, against the duller warp of cotton. The quality only becomes more beautiful the more you wear the fabric.

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Towel blue

The traditional kitchen and toilet towel in “poor man’s suit” in classic white or blue.

The towels from Gysinge have an interesting history. Until the 1980s, Gysinge was a nursing home run by the county council. To create employment for the 60 or so mentally ill people who stayed at the home, there was, among other things, a weaving room. Many of the inmates spent a long time in the weaving room, which gave them a more meaningful existence – and the county council a cash injection. At the home, real fabrics were woven, not therapy work in the modern, negative sense. For example, all the curtains, tablecloths and napkins were woven for the reopening of Gysinge Manor in the 1960s. This towel fabric is a so-called sieve weave (the pattern looks like a sieve – but only appears after washing!), woven to order for a guesthouse in Järvsö in the 60s. The weaving method is also called poor man’s cloth, a weaving method that produced a fabric that looks much more exclusive than it really is. The weaving method is very old and produces a highly absorbent and durable fabric, which has always been used for towels and tablecloths. The fabric is most beautiful if you mangle it, then the shiny linen threads in the weft are emphasized, against the duller warp of cotton. The quality only becomes more beautiful the more you wear the fabric.

One of the contradictions of the fabric is that as towels it gives a slightly old-fashioned robust character, while as a well-mangled tablecloth it gives an exclusive feeling of “Oh my, what’s this?”.

EUR23.93

Towel white

The traditional kitchen and toilet towel in “poor man’s suit” in classic white or blue. The sturdy napkin for everyday and party.

This towel fabric is a so-called sieve weave (the pattern looks like a sieve – but only appears after washing!), woven to order for a guesthouse in Järvsö in the 60s.

The weaving method is also called poor man’s cloth, a weaving method that produced a fabric that looks much more exclusive than it really is.

The weaving method is very old and produces a highly absorbent and durable fabric, which has always been used for towels and tablecloths. The fabric is most beautiful if you mangle it, then the shiny linen threads in the weft are emphasized, against the duller warp of cotton. The quality only becomes more beautiful the more you wear the fabric.

One of the contradictions of the fabric is that as towels it gives a slightly old-fashioned robust character, while as a well-mangled tablecloth it gives an exclusive feeling of “Oh my, what’s this?”.

EUR23.93

Kitchen shelf complete

Kitchen shelf in simple Art Nouveau style after a model from around 1905. Originally made as a counter shelf with shelves of rib where household utensils were placed for drainage.

Pine, untreated. One shelf. Length 125 cm, width 28 cm, height (bracket) 340 mm, thickness 2 cm.

Additional freight.

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