Siamoise is a term for various Weaving fabric varieties, usually cotton and linen blends, with patterns such as checks and stripes. Siamoise was so named because it imitated clothing worn by 17th century Siamese ambassadors.
History
At first, Siamoise was made with
silk in warp and
cotton filling yarn. The fabric resembled the clothing of the Siamese (Thai) ambassadors who visited King Louis XIV in 1684 and 1686. That is why the name 'Siamoise' was given to it.
Modifications
Initially, the fabric was a combination of silk and cotton, and the silk warp weakened the material. Replacing the silk with
linen produced a stronger fabric that was highly successful.
Further additions
Since then, Siamoise has undergone many additions such as linen and cotton patterns, varied stripes, and checks and blends of different fibers such as silk and wool.
Influences
The Siamese Embassy to France in 1686 had brought to the Court samples of multicolor Thai
Ikat textiles. These were enthusiastically adopted by the French nobility to become
Toiles flammées or
Siamoises de Rouen, often with checkered blue-and-white designs. After the French Revolution and its dislike for foreign luxury, the textiles were named "Toiles des Charentes" or cottons of
Provence.
[McCabe, Ina Baghdiantz (2008) Orientalism in Early Modern France, , Berg Publishing, Oxford, p.222-223]
== Gallery ==
Ikat, French manufacture, 18th century]]
led by
Kosa Pan in 1686, by Nicolas Larmessin]]
See also
-
Siamese embassy to France (1686)
-
Orientalism in early modern France