The main historical techniques are:
hand-painting, woodblock printing (overall the most common), stencilling, and
various types of machine-printing. The first three all date back to before
1700.
Wallpaper, using the printmaking
technique of woodcut, gained popularity in Renaissance Europe amongst the
emerging gentry. The social elite continued to hang large tapestries on the
walls of their homes, as they had in the Middle Ages. These tapestries added
color to the room as well as providing an insulating layer between the stone
walls and the room, thus retaining heat in the room. However, tapestries were
extremely expensive and so only the very rich could afford them. Less well-off
members of the elite, unable to buy tapestries due either to prices or wars preventing
international trade, turned to wallpaper to brighten up their rooms.
Early wallpaper featured scenes
similar to those depicted on tapestries, and large sheets of the paper were
sometimes hung loose on the walls, in the style of tapestries, and sometimes
pasted as today. Prints were very often pasted to walls, instead of being
framed and hung, and the largest sizes of prints, which came in several sheets,
were probably mainly intended to be pasted to walls. Some important artists
made such pieces - notably Albrecht Dürer, who worked on both large picture
prints and also ornament prints - intended for wall-hanging. The largest
picture print was The Triumphal Arch commissioned by the Holy Roman Emperor
Maximilian I and completed in 1515. This measured a colossal 3.57 by 2.95
metres, made up of 192 sheets, and was printed in a first edition of 700
copies, intended to be hung in palaces and, in particular, town halls, after
hand-coloring.
Very few samples of the earliest
repeating pattern wallpapers survive, but there are a large number of old
master prints, often in engraving of repeating or repeatable decorative
patterns. These are called ornament prints and were intended as models for
wallpaper makers, among other uses.
England and France were leaders in
European wallpaper manufacturing. Among the earliest known samples is one found
on a wall from England and is printed on the back of a London proclamation of
1509. It became very popular in England following Henry VIII's excommunication
from the Catholic Church - English aristocrats had always imported tapestries
from Flanders and Arras, but Henry VIII's split with the Catholic Church had
resulted in a fall in trade with Europe. Without any tapestry manufacturers in
England, English gentry and aristocracy alike turned to wallpaper.
During the Protectorate under
Oliver Cromwell, the manufacture of wallpaper, seen as a frivolous item by the
Puritan government, was halted. Following the Restoration of Charles II,
wealthy people across England began demanding wallpaper again - Cromwell's
regime had imposed a boring culture on people, and following his death, wealthy
people began purchasing comfortable domestic items which had been banned under
the Puritan state.
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