A podcast about historic needlework and those who stitched it
Season 2, Episode 10 (Episode 36)
The Embroideries and Lace of the Wiener Werkstätte (8 April 2021)
Wiener Werkstätte logo
Overscreen for Karl and Leopoldine Wittgenstein, Josef Hoffmann and Carl Otto Czeschka, 1906, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Design for an embroidered frieze in Palais Stoclet, Brussels, Carl Otto Czeschka, c. 1910, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Page from the Wiener Werkstätte photograph album “Mode” with dresses after designs by Eduard Josef Wimmer-Wisgrill, c. 1910, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Postcard, 1911, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Ball dress, Josef Hoffmann, c. 1910, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Blouse, Eduard Josef Wimmer-Wisgrill, c. 1910, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Silk pouch bag “Traumland” (“Dreamland”), Dagobert Peche, 1919, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Beaded purse, 1920-30, Vienna, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Design for cushions, Maria Likarz-Strauss, 1928, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna
Tulle lace doilies, under direction of Dagobert Peche, 1920s, Wiener Werkstätte, sold by Christies in 2003
Lace insert, Anny Schroder-Ehrenfest, 1922, Cooper Hewitt Museum
Lace curtain, Anny Schroder-Ehrenfest, Wiener Werkstätte archive, MAK Museum Vienna