SKU: 3141-42-1
EUR2.71
Wallpaper sample 50 cm.
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EUR71.79
Wallpaper sample approx. 50 cm of the wallpaper Nästgårds, brown.
Typical wallpaper from the second half of the 19th century with an elegant medallion pattern in a single-color print. The wallpaper was in a strong ultramarine blue color against a beige background in the lower hall of the Nästgårdshuset in Gysinge, probably put up in 1887. Here is the same pattern in brown, which is another typical variant of a single-color print from the time. The wallpaper is printed in the old glue dye technique on unprimed paper and the wallpaper therefore has a unique luster and thinness that is not available in other wallpaper prints. In return, an unprimed wallpaper is slightly, but only slightly, more fragile in the wallpapering process.
Period wallpaper from the late 19th century in a muted blue tone with a beige background. The wallpaper is a recreation from an old wallpaper fragment of unknown origin. The simple but detailed checkerboard pattern fits both in older houses and in a more modern environment. The wallpaper is also available in a mild green color with a beige background.
The wallpaper has a straight pattern fit and is edge-cut. Printed using the old glue dye technique on unprimed paper. An important step for us in the production of a new wallpaper. However, unpasted wallpaper is slightly more fragile when wallpapering.
The environmental image shows the blue wallpaper and door painted in a self-mixed color of blue and gray linseed oil paints.
“Farstun” is a typical Hälsingland stencil wallpaper from the last half of the 19th century. The era is known in Sweden as the Karl Johan period and had a penchant for silk-imitating patterns in sober colors. But very few could afford such silk wallpapers. Most had to make do with imitations, usually in the form of stencilled patterns in glue paint on rag paper. The middle classes of the population, priests and burghers, were also unable to afford expensive silk damask, but instead turned to local painters who became masters at imitating fabric patterns using stencils and silk-like colors. Finally, farmers also embraced the fashion for silk wallpaper, but translated the wallpaper patterns into bright vernacular colors. We have found this wallpaper in several farms in the Järvsö area where the color scheme blue, gray, red is the most common and the wallpaper that most closely resembles the farmers’ traditional colors. The more subdued color schemes in the catalog, on the other hand, are more typical of the 19th century and the Karl Johan era. Stenciled wallpaper is almost always combined with a single-color breast panel up to window height, made of wood or gray rag paper. This gives the rooms a sense of calm and harmonious proportions, even if the wallpaper patterns happen to be wild and colorful.
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