Yesterday I showed a church, today it is a map. In fact it is a map of Portugal:
It was sent to me by Raquel, who is Portughese but lives in Belgium. I have been to Portugal a few times but only to the Algarve area which is in the south. I love the white wine they call 'vinho verde'. We are planning a road trip in the spring to stock up on wine.
The stamps are impressive:
I did some research on the top one as I like art and that looked like a sculpture. In fact it's a tapestry. In Portalegre (a town on the map more or less in the middle of the red bit) they make tapestries from original artwork by Portuguese (or foreign) artists.
The original is enlarged to the desired size onto a
squared paper where each square represents a stitch – called the weaving
drawing. The designer then works on the drawing, by comparison with the
original, paying attention to the shapes, borders between colours and every
detail that will have to be translated into the weaving. The colours have also
to be selected, which involves matching the original with the colours (over
7,000 are available) in the manufacture’s wool palette.
The decorative weft
consists of eight threads, which means that different coloured yarns can be
mixed in the same weft, producing very rich chromatic effects, enabling depth,
transparency and surface superposition effects with virtually an infinity of
colours.
The tapestry grows
horizontally. After each passage of the decorative weft there is a passage of a
fine cotton weft which will be concealed by the thickness of the decorative
weft.
The work of art on the stamp is called: 'Finalidade sem fin' and the artist is Cruzeiro Seixas:
You can see his complete work plus a detail on the stamp but here is a larger photo:
And here is a small detail from the tapestry:
Isn't it beautiful! I enjoyed looking into this. And all this just from a stamp! (The info and images are from the Tapecarias Portalegre website).
That's it from me today.
CU tomorrow when I link up with T for Tuesday.
Blessings,
Lisca
2 comments:
I enjoyed hearing about the detail work in these tapestries. This a very effective series.
Hi Lisca, the stamps are beautiful. I'm Portuguese, although I only lived in Portugal during 12 years and I didn't even know much about these tapestries from Portalegre. About 1 hour's drive away is another famous town in Portugal known for their hand-made tapestries - Arraiolos, which were inspired by Persian carpets. Amazing what you can learn from a stamp :)
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