V&A Voysey potholder

£8.50

Out of Stock

Free UK delivery on orders £60 and over

Introduce a nineteenth-century note to your cooking regimen with the V&A’s Voysey-inspired potholder. Made in the UK, it features a detail from Voysey’s Minto wallpaper designed in 1901 and held in the V&A collections. Replicating the horizontal rows of perched birds in Voysey’s original design, this piece is wadded for safety and includes a practical slip pocket. Match with other V&A Arts and Crafts favourites to give your kitchen a Victorian flourish.

Author/Artist/Designer

C.F.A. Voysey

Dimensions

20.5 x 20.5 cm

Composition

Screen printed cotton with polyester wadding, wash at 30 degrees

Product code

148313

Delivery

 

Our standard delivery charges and estimated timescales are as follows. Selected product exceptions apply; see product details. International deliveries may also be subject to customs fees or taxes upon arrival, which are your responsibility.

Standard delivery per order
UK
£5 – or FREE for orders over £60
3-6 working days
Europe
£20
6-10 working days
Rest of World
£30
10-14 working days

Returns

 

If you have any concerns, most items are eligible for a full refund within 28 days of purchase. Exceptions apply, such as perishable items; customised or personalised items; and items with a broken hygiene seal.

 

Find out more here.

 

About the artist
about the artist

C.F.A. Voysey

Charles Voysey was an architect, textile and furniture designer, born in Yorkshire in 1857. Regarded as one of the finest architects of the Arts and Crafts movement, he was also an accomplished furniture designer, creating purposefully simple, restrained and elegant pieces. His interest in interiors lead to success as a designer of wallpaper, fabrics, tiles, ceramics and metalwork. Voysey’s textile work shows the influence of William Morris, with similar principles regarding repeating patterns, and the use of botanical and animal imagery. His dense yet simple representations of the organic went on to influence the Modernist movement, who were inspired by his eye for purity of line, and an open and unfussy style.