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Pocketbook

Maker (American)
Additional Title(s)
  • Needlework Pocketbook
ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Date1776
Mediumwool on linen, cotton trim
Dimensionsplexi case: 5 1/4 x 9 1/4 x 3 1/2 in. (13.3 x 23.5 x 8.9 cm.)
DescriptionFold over needle work wallet floral pattern; with “Elisabeth Fellows 1776”; New England.
Credit LineJonathan and Karin Fielding Collection
Label TextPocketbooks were used by both men and women. While men’s purses carried coins, paper money, invoices, and receipts, women typically used theirs for jewelry, sewing implements, and other personal items. Most pocket books were stitched in floral or abstract patterns in crewel - a two-ply worsted yarn - on linen. As status symbols denoting wealth and social standing, they were often stitched by a wife or daughter and presented as gifts to parents or husbands.
Status
On view
Object numberL2015.41.68
Wallet
Unknown, American
ca. 1775
Object number: L2015.41.66
Portrait of Joseph Hyacinthe François-de-Paule de Rigaud, comte de Vaudreuil
Elisabeth Louise Vigée-LeBrun
ca. 1784
Object number: 2022.20
Photography © 2014 Fredrik Nilsen
Unknown, American
ca. 1775
Object number: L2015.41.64
Unknown, American
ca. 1775
Object number: 2020.15.4.1
Carpet (Astrology)
Savonnerie Manufactory
1670-1687
Object number: 15.2
Carpet (Music)
Savonnerie Manufactory
1670- 1687
Object number: 15.3
Photography © 2015 Fredrik Nilsen
Savonnerie Manufactory
1719/84; frame of later date (probably nineteenth-century).
Object number: 11.41
Trent
John Henry Dearle
ca. 1888
Object number: 2000.5.889
Yarn-sewn Rug
Hannah Rosina Maynard Phillips
ca. 1830
Object number: L2015.41.83
Little Chintz
William Morris
ca. 1876
Object number: 2000.5.122
Honeysuckle
William Morris
registered in 1876
Object number: 2000.5.888
Carpet Fragment
Unknown, British
n.d.
Object number: 2000.5.904