All Results For “sanderson one sixty wallpaper”
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Sanderson
A classic Sanderson floral from the talented hand of Kenneth Truman, produced for the first time as a wallpaper. Truman joined Sanderson in 1939 bringing an astonishing aptitude for botanical drawing. He influenced the look and quality of floral artwork created at Sanderson’s Uxbridge studio for more than three decades.
Dandelion clocks - Fiona Howard created this fun 50’s retro pattern for the Sanderson studio in 2009, which features stylized dandelion heads with seeds radiating from a central point.
Absolutely beautiful! The gold has a slight shimmer that makes the whole wall pop. Easy to put up, great quality!. Erin. San Antonio, TX. 2024-10-08 19:12:54
Stapleton Park - Hand-drawn for fabric by Pat Etheridge in 1990, this large-scale floral bouquet in a typically English style combines roses, cornflowers, foxgloves, and hydrangeas with trailing stems and foliage. Now accurately translated into a wide-width wallpaper, surflex printing retains the design’s original scale.
Caverley - Based on an early 19th-century hand block print and typically English in style, this wallpaper depicts charming birds perched on leafy boughs amongst generous blossom.
Amanpuri - Redrawn from a typical 1920s interpretation of Jacobean embroidery, this wallpaper shows a stylized trail of leaves and flowers and has been engraved to capture the inky richness of its block print texture.
Very Rose and Peony - Adapted and enlarged from an original textile artwork, this archive-inspired wallpaper is layered with the most incredible floral blooms. Digital printing showcases the design’s depth and intensity of color.
Etchings & roses - Three rare and beautifully engraved prints from Mulhouse have been faithfully reproduced in this simple but effective wallpaper design. The addition of colored backgrounds provides a very contemporary feel in spite of its antique origins.
Now available as a recolored and surface-printed wallpaper, this design was first created in 1988 by the Sanderson studio to coordinate with Sorilla printed chintz.
Add a vintage feel to any room with this iconic Sanderson floral, produced as wallpaper for the first time. Surface printing gives a lovely 3D quality to the design’s chalky ground.
Out of Stock
Provisionally titled The Drawing Room this pretty design with its clusters of wild roses, rhododendron flowers, and bleeding hearts was designed by Pat Etheridge. Now available in two new colorways, surface printing adds a lovely look and feel.
First launched as a wallpaper in 1914, Rose and Peony was redesigned as a printed fabric in 1929 and released the following year. By the 1960s it had been produced in twenty-eight colorways to suit changing tastes. It remains one of Sanderson’s most loved surface printed designs.
Stapleton park - designed by pat Etheridge and first launched in 1990 as part of the Sanderson Carlisle collection, this large-scale floral bouquet in a typically English style combines roses, cornflowers, foxgloves, and hydrangeas with trailing stems and foliage. The squirrel/olive colorway is printed on plush velvet and navy/olive on smart, soft cotton.
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