Broderie anglaise in the TRC collection
Collar decorated with floral broderie anglaise, handmade, c. 1900, the Netherlands (TRC 2007.0755).Gillian Vogelsang-Eastwood, 1 June 2024
While working on the various European volumes of the Bloomsbury World Encyclopedia of Embroidery, we often come across broderie anglaise, otherwise also sometimes known as broderie de Calais, although there are minor differences. There are various examples of this type of embroidery in the TRC collection.
In the US the term Madeira work is frequently used. As such it is named after the Portuguese island of Madeira, which lies in the Atlantic Ocean, west of Morocco. It was probably introduced on Madeira by Catholic nuns who taught in convent schools.
But what is broderie anglaise?
Basically it is a type of whitework, i.e., embroidery using white threads on a white ground, with the pattern mainly made from eyelets. These are small, round or oval holes deliberately cut into the ground material.











