- Linenfold
Linenfold (or linen fold) is a simple style of
relief carving used to decorate wood panelling with a design "imitating window tracery", [Whiton, Augustus Sherrill. "Interior Design and Decoration". Lippincott, 1974. ISBN 0397473028. Page 72.] "imitating folded linen" [Fletcher, Banister. "A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method". Scribner, 1961. Page 1266.] or "stiffly imitating folded material". [Wight, Jane A. "Brick Building in England from the Middle Ages to 1550". J. Baker, 1972. Page 423.] Originally fromFlanders , the style became widespread acrossNorthern Europe in the 14th to 16th centuries. The name was applied to the decorative style byantiquarian connoisseur s in the early 19th century; the contemporary name was apparently "lignum undulatum" (Latin : "wavy wood"), Nathaniel Lloyd pointed out. [Nathaniel Lloyd, "Medieval Wainscoting and the Development of the Linen Panel" "TheBurlington Magazine for Connoisseurs" 53 No. 308 (November 1928), pp 230-37.]Wood panelling or
wainscoting , almost always made fromoak , became popular in Northern Europe from the 14th century, after Europeancarpenter s rediscovered the techniques to create frame and paneljoinery . The framing technique was used from the 13th century onwards to clad interior walls, [A directive of Henry III for "Norway boards" to "wainscot" the chamber of the prince Edward atWinchester was noted by Nathaniel Lloyd 1928:230.] to form choir stalls, and to manufacture moveable and semi-moveable furniture, such as chests and presses, and even the back panels of joined chairs. Linenfold was developed as a simple technique to decorate the flat surfaces of the ubiquitous panels thus created.The simplest linenfold style is "parchemin" (also known as "
parchment fold"), a low relief carving formed like a sheet ofpaper or piece oflinen folded in half and then spread out with the sharp centered fold running vertically, and the top and bottom running out to the corners of the panel, with something of the appearance of an opened book. This style of linenfold can be created using a plane and a pre-drawn pattern, with a little finishing chisel work required at each end. A stitched embroidered border could be counterfeited by the use of punches. More complicated styles resemble a sheet of fabric that has volute folds back and forth many times. Linenfold might be fielded, visually complete against a flat panel surface and contained within each panel, or it might provide the appearance of a continuous linenfold passing behind the stiles of the framing.Carving linenfold decoration requires little carpentry skill or training, and it can be mass produced by a semi-skilled workforce: the creased designs were run with a moulding plane; only top and bottom edges needed to be finished with a
chisel . Significantly, linenfold had no prototype in architectural practice: [John Gloag, "A Short Dictionary of Furniture", rev. ed. 1969: sub "Linenfold"] the technique of the moulding plane is not applicable to stone-cutting. Workshops were established by the later 15th century to cater to the developing market for inexpensively "ceiled" rooms, [Hence "ceiling ".] supplementing the more complicated, and more expensive, patterns oftracery used in the earliest interior panelling.Regional variations quickly developed in
England ,France andGermany . The linenfold of France, Netherlands, and Germany "is carved with a sharper definition and greater delicacy than was usual in England", [Encyclopaedia Britannica , 15th ed. Article "Decorative Arts and Furnishings", section "Middle Ages" (by Joseph T. Butler, [http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-73720 online] ).] where an early linenfold panelling can be seen in the hall screen atCompton Wynyates . Linenfold started to fall out of fashion asRenaissance styles spread in the 16th century, replaced by fielded panels for simpler work, and more complicated "Roman" and higher relief carving, but linenfold continued to be used in less sophisticated surroundings well into the 17th century. In the 19th century, linenfold panelling reappeared in the revivals of the Gothic and Tudor styles.Notes
External links
* [http://www.medievalwoodworking.com/articles/linen_carve.htm Carving linenfold]
* [http://www4.bfn.org/bah/a/DCTNRY/l/linen.html Illustrated Architecture Dictionary]
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