. "Cushion cover with arms of Sacheverell"@en . . . "British Galleries:\nPlease look at both sides\n\nTapestry weaving was used to make small items, such as this cushion cover, as well as large wall hangings.The loose threads on the back show where one area of colour in the pattern ends and another begins. The front has faded but the back shows the original bright colours. Each colour was woven as a separate block. [27/03/2003]"@en . . . "T.195-1914" . . . . "British Galleries:\nPlease look at both sides\n\nTapestry weaving was used to make small items, such as this cushion cover, as well as large wall hangings.The loose threads on the back show where one area of colour in the pattern ends and another begins. The front has faded but the back shows the original bright colours. Each colour was woven as a separate block. [27/03/2003]"@en . "Cushion cover"@en . . . . . "Object Type\nCushions were important domestic furnishings. In an age when fixed upholstery did not exist, they made hard wooden seats more comfortable, as well as adding decoration and colour. Chairs were then unusual, but the cushions could be used on wooden stools and benches, on window seats and chapel stalls. They might be made of tapestry or other woven fabrics, or embroidered canvas, silk or velvet. Many embroidered cushions survive in historic houses and are therefore more familiar, but a small number of tapestry cushions are also known.\n\nPeople\nConspicuous display of social and economic standing, once the privilege only of the aristocracy, was an important result of the increasing wealth of Elizabethan society. More and more people could afford luxury items which could be displayed inside their house, and some made use of coats of arms, names or initials on the fabric of the building itself. This cushion cover is modest and relatively simple in style. It shows the arms of a once influential provincial family, although it is not entirely certain which of them was the cushion\u2019s first owner. There were several men in different branches of the family called Henry Sacheverell \u2013 represented by the H and S \u2013 to whom this cushion, and its twin in the Burrell Collection in Glasgow, might have belonged."@en . . . . . . "0.6756"^^ . . . . . . "0.4979"^^ . "Object Type\nCushions were important domestic furnishings. In an age when fixed upholstery did not exist, they made hard wooden seats more comfortable, as well as adding decoration and colour. Chairs were then unusual, but the cushions could be used on wooden stools and benches, on window seats and chapel stalls. They might be made of tapestry or other woven fabrics, or embroidered canvas, silk or velvet. Many embroidered cushions survive in historic houses and are therefore more familiar, but a small number of tapestry cushions are also known.\n\nPeople\nConspicuous display of social and economic standing, once the privilege only of the aristocracy, was an important result of the increasing wealth of Elizabethan society. More and more people could afford luxury items which could be displayed inside their house, and some made use of coats of arms, names or initials on the fabric of the building itself. This cushion cover is modest and relatively simple in style. It shows the arms of a once influential provincial family, although it is not entirely certain which of them was the cushion\u2019s first owner. There were several men in different branches of the family called Henry Sacheverell \u2013 represented by the H and S \u2013 to whom this cushion, and its twin in the Burrell Collection in Glasgow, might have belonged."@en . . . "0.6014"^^ . . . . . . . "1600 / 1620, Warwickshire" . "0.6701"^^ . "Cushion cover with arms of Sacheverell"@en . . "Cushion cover"@en . "1600 / 1620, Warwickshire" .