Philip Sykas

Fellowship Year: 

2014

Project Title: 

Promiscuous Prints: British Garment Prints in Canada

Dr. Sykas focused on printed British textiles intended for use as garments from 1780 to 1880, a period in which immense growth in the market for textiles occurred in tandem with radical changes to their technologies and design. He investigated many aspects of these textiles, including the intersections of the increased interest in botanical and scientific study at the time and how they influenced the design of prints, the form and structure of repeat prints, how weave structure was determined by the different types of spinning manufacturing at the time and the various qualities of thread and twist they produced, and the most common mistakes and idiosyncrasies in the printing process and how they were solved. Within the ROM’s extensive textile collection, he found items that demonstrated the historical development of printed textiles for dress...[including] advances in both France and Britain, telling the story of printed garments through key aspects of printing technology, colour, pattern, and motif.

About the Fellow: 

Dr Philip Sykas is an expert on the design, use, and various technologies of printed textiles. He is a Research Associate in the Fashion Institute of Manchester Metropolitan University (UK) where he completed his doctoral thesis in 2000. It examined the pattern books of 19th-century calico printers not only from a design perspective, but also from technological and business perspectives. He has worked previously as a museum curator and as a textile conservator.

Related Publications: 

“Textiles 1800-1920” in: Baxter, Denise (ed.) (2016) A Cultural History of Dress and Fashion in the Age of Empire. London: Bloomsbury Academic.

Authored by: Kait Sykes

Authored by: Kait Sykes