EXHIBITING TEXTILES IS DIFFICULT!

Conservators often hear this remark - and it is true that textiles should ideally be displayed flat and in a dim light, to slow further breakdown. Because of this it is difficult to appreciate the fine details that are hidden in the "brown rags". Ideally, the textile mount for exhibition should also be suitable for storage. This is easy with smaller fragments that can be mounted in frames of acid free cardboard.

Detail (10cm across) from a fragment with embroidery from the Mammen excavation, a Viking Age site near Viborg in Jutland, excavated in 1868. The fragment is framed with a window so that the sewing technique can be studied from the back.

Photos or drawings can be used to show details that are hidden, or lost under low light in the exhibition.

Bronze Age Man's hat from Trindhøj, Jutland, with a detail of the interior sewing and a detched knot

Larger textiles that are folded or draped in exhibition are better stored flat.

Bronze Age woman's grave, Borum Eshøj. Jutland.



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