Abstract

The William Liddell archive is a collection of over 1600 glass photographic plates recovered from the premises of the abandoned Ewart–Liddell weaving factory in Donaghcloney, County Down, Northern Ireland. The salvaged collection was donated to the Belfast School of Art in 2007; however, the condition was so fragile that they have not been able to be accessed or used. Heritage Lottery Funding was secured in 2017 to make this unique archive accessible to the public and to support a series of local road shows culminating in an exhibition in Autumn 2018 in the Linen Centre, Lisburn Museum. This paper reports on preliminary findings after the careful digitization and cataloguing of each plate.The plates appear to have been kept as a record of the working methods of designers and technical draughtsmen and draughtswomen in the company dating from the early twentieth century to 1970s. The sketches, designs, and technical drawings recorded were used for the production of Jacquard Damask linen for tableware, bed linen and furnishings. The collection evidences a tantalizing clientele that was worldwide. William Liddell produced high quality Damask linen products for clients across the globe, top hotels such as the Hilton, Savoy, Raffles and the Ritz; shipping lines such as Cunard, White Star, and the Union Steam Navigation Company of New Zealand; organizations such as the U.S. Navy, the Bohemian Club San Francisco, Canadian Coastguards and Claridges.The photographs document design specifications from Liddell’s clients, early sketches, painted drawings, accurately hand-drafted designs and typography, point paper layouts, and proof cloths. It is extraordinary that this form of unique photographic record was kept and perhaps more astonishing that the observation of everyday affairs of a textile manufacturing design office were the subjects of such an extensive and persistent documentary endeavor. This paper reports on the preliminary findings of the study, the approaches used to classify and cross-reference the archive’s content and outlines the present categories being used in terms of client markets, design influences, and stages of the Damask design process.

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