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My name is Mayte Van den Broeck, an MA student of Heritage and Memory at the University of Amsterdam, who started an internship at the TRC in early February. As my first month as an intern at the TRC has flown by, I wanted to reflect on the experiences I have had so far by describing what a day at the TRC can look like as an intern.

Fig. 1. An impression of the depot with the TRC collection.Fig. 1. An impression of the depot with the TRC collection.A typical day starts at 9am with a cup of tea, as I organise what I plan to do that day. One of my main tasks as an intern is to go through the Chinese collection in the depot (Fig. 1), box by box, to make sure that each textile piece is in order. This means checking each piece for issues such as mold or damage, as well as making sure all the information on each piece is present and correct in the database.

When I started with this particular work, the very first box I chose from the Chinese collection, picked at random, was full of shoes, particularly lotus shoes (see the TRC online exhibition on the subject). The practice of foot binding started over a thousand years ago in the Early Song Dynasty (960-1279) and lasted until the early 20th century.

The girls and women whose feet were bound, in accordance to this widespread practice, would wear these finely decorated lotus shoes. The colours and decorations would depend on the wearer’s social status and the symbolism that they wished to emulate through the decorative designs on the shoes.

As part of the TRC’s work on the history, techniques, designs and uses of textiles, we are working quietly and steadily on making the TRC and Leiden an international centre for the study and teaching of embroidery in all its multiple forms. We currently have nearly 5,000 examples of embroidery from all over the world. 

Fig.1. Fragment of linen with an embroidered design worked in wool, probably from a child's tunic Egypt, 5th-6th century AD  (TRC 2000.0014).Fig.1. Fragment of linen with an embroidered design worked in wool, probably from a child's tunic Egypt, 5th-6th century AD (TRC 2000.0014).

Fig. 2. Fragment of linen with an embroidered design worked in purple, orange and blue wool, probably from a child's tunic. Egypt, 5th-6th century AD (TRC 2000.0015).Fig. 2. Fragment of linen with an embroidered design worked in purple, orange and blue wool, probably from a child's tunic. Egypt, 5th-6th century AD (TRC 2000.0015).

by Emilie Lambert, TRC volunteer and archaeology student at Leiden University

Last February marked a year since I joined the TRC as an intern and a part-time volunteer. In that time, I had the opportunity to do a large number of personal projects and I came to fully appreciate the TRC as a place of learning. This piece is a short reflection on the variety of work I have been doing.

Fig. 1. A pair of temple pendants from Afghanistan (TRC 2024.0637a-b).Fig. 1. A pair of temple pendants from Afghanistan (TRC 2024.0637a-b).

A few days ago, Gillian and I returned from a quick drive to Nice in southern France to see our dear friends Rolando and May Schinasi. Sharing my fascination with Afghanistan, and Gillian’s interest in textiles (or should I say: obsession?), they kindly gave us a number of original, mid-19th century prints of Afghanistan showing local people and their clothing, drawn by foreign artists. I want to discuss a number of them, not so much because of the people depicted, but mainly because of the garments they are wearing.

Fig. 1: "Umeer Dost Mahomed Khan”.Tinted lithograph. Plate XII in Hart and Atkinson 1843. TRC 2025.0194.Fig. 1: "Umeer Dost Mahomed Khan”.Tinted lithograph. Plate XII in Hart and Atkinson 1843. TRC 2025.0194.

by Ann Brysbaert, Professor in Ancient Technologies, Materials and Crafts, Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden University. She is also the Director of the Netherland Institute at Athens, Greece. 

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For quite some time, I knew about this seemingly small place of the Textile Research Centre (TRC) in Leiden (as seen from the outside). Initially, I never found it open when I passed by on my walks, although the fascination for it was always there.

Eventually, I looked it up online in 2021, and found out that a famous textile scholar ran it: Dr. Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood, a name all too familiar to 2nd year students of the BSc. (Hons, now MSc.) conservation course at UCL, which I took in the mid-90s, and which incorporated a course on the materials, technologies and conservation issues relating to woven materials and textiles.

Dyeing experiments with different types of fibres in cochineal-and-mordant solution. Photograph by author.Dyeing experiments with different types of fibres in cochineal-and-mordant solution. Photograph by author.

Before the Nakba of 1948, the creation of embroidered cushions in Palestine was an integral part of a bride's dowry and a way to adorn her home with handmade beauty. These cushions were not just functional items but intricate masterpieces, decorated with sophisticated embroidery patterns. Each piece was crafted with care, symbolizing the pride and skill of the embroiderer, as well as the traditions that were passed down through generations.

Part of an embroidered cushion cover, Palestine, 1920s (TRC 2025.0007).Part of an embroidered cushion cover, Palestine, 1920s (TRC 2025.0007).

Pair of underwear with a long, blue fringe and gold-coloured material with sequins. Cairo, Egypt, 1995 (TRC 1997.0119b).Pair of underwear with a long, blue fringe and gold-coloured material with sequins. Cairo, Egypt, 1995 (TRC 1997.0119b).The TRC has a large collection of underwear from many countries, from Egypt to Sweden, from the Netherlands to Tanzania. I do like the 1995 Egyptian pants with a long, blue fringe and gold-coloured material with sequins (TRC 1997.0119b), although the dark red pair of panties with a decoration of pink flowers from Tanzania (TRC 2004.0164) might be easier to wear.

The TRC collection includes bras, slips, knickers, stocking belts, long johns, chemises, pantaloons, drawers and bloomers.

My favourites are, however, seven lingerie pouches from Japan in the 1920s-1930s, exported to the Western market to store delicate silk lingerie and scarves (TRC 2016.2172TRC 2016.2177). The floral patterns and the more abstract Art Deco designs that decorate the pouches are lovely.

Lingerie is very present in the work of Dutch artist Lara Schnitger, who was born in Haarlem in 1969. Schnitger is a Dutch textile artist who now lives and works in Los Angeles (US).

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Contact

Boerhaavelaan 6
2334 EN Leiden.
Tel. +31 (0)71 5134144 (office hours)  
office@trcleiden.org 

The TRC is open every day from 10.00 to 15.00

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NL39 INGB 0002 9823 59, in the name of the Stichting Textile Research Centre.

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The TRC is dependent on project support and individual donations. All of our work is being carried out by volunteers. To support the TRC activities, we therefore welcome your financial assistance: donations can be transferred to bank account number (IBAN) NL39 INGB 000 298 2359, in the name of the Stichting Textile Research Centre. BIC code is: INGBNL2A.

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