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Newsolio (blog)

Do it yourself interior design: When are wallpaper borders a good idea?
Newsolio (blog)
Provides tips on when and how wallpaper borders can be used to establish an interior decorating theme and where to hang them. When you are planning to redo a room, usually the first thing you must decide on is a decorating theme.

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How to Select and Hang Wallpaper
Fox News
Do you want to work with prepasted or nonpasted wallpaper? What is the surface area of the area that you want to cover, and how much wallpaper do you need? Home Depot's buying guide for wallpaper and borders suggests checking with a salesperson to ...


Newsolio (blog)

Removing wall paper borders: Tips, tricks and advice
Newsolio (blog)
Some tips, tricks and advice for removing those difficult wall paper borders with some great tool ideas. Wallpaper borders have become very popular in the last two decades and they can add personality to any room. However, when you decide to take them ...


GigaOM

Phone! SMS! No, I want WiFi on all my flights
GigaOM
(from WallPaper magazine) Instead of spending a fortune using satellite phones, this new system's charges are almost the same as they would be if you were roaming from another country. Plus, the calls and texts will be added to your mobile bill after ...


Ready for A Print and Pattern Extravaganza? Behold Kyle Knight's Design Obsessions
D Magazine
From Matisse inspired outdoor fabrics to bold Chinoiserie-inspired wallpaper and rugs that riff on a star-filled sky, for Knight, prints rule. After the jump, she shares eight of her latest design obsessions?no neutrals allowed. 1. Outdoor Fabric.

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Thomas The Train Wallpaper Border
n 4,500 rolls of wallpaper representing some 1,377 patterns was discovered by members of the Brillio...
thomas-the-train-wallpaper-border.php

Discount Wallpaper Child Border
tates increased dramatically thanks to new printing technologies that enabled printers to manufactur...
discount-wallpaper-child-border.php

Border Laundry Wallpaper
of the nineteenth century the production of wallpaper in the United States increased dramatically t...
border-laundry-wallpaper.php

Care Bear Wallpaper Border
arlors, dining rooms, and bedrooms. Periodicals proliferated at this time, and since many of them we...
care-bear-wallpaper-border.php

Thomas The Train Wallpaper Border
to the realm of the middle class. Kitchens, closets, attic staircases, and even ceilings were often ...
thomas-the-train-wallpaper-border.php

Beach Wallpaper Border
ed by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. The firm Victorian Collectibles in Milwaukee, Wis...
beach-wallpaper-border.php

Camouflage Wallpaper Border
en ceilings were often embellished with a variety of papers in addition to the more traditional room...
camouflage-wallpaper-border.php

Wallpaper Border Race Car
itchens, closets, attic staircases, and even ceilings were often embellished with a variety of paper...
wallpaper-border-race-car.php

Flower Fairy Wallpaper Border
of the twentieth century wallpaper manufacturers began to market their products by issuing sample b...
flower-fairy-wallpaper-border.php

Border Girl Little Wallpaper
ceilings were often embellished with a variety of papers in addition to the more traditional rooms, ...
border-girl-little-wallpaper.php

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During the latter half of the nineteenth century the production of wallpaper in the United States increased dramatically thanks to new printing technologies that enabled printers to manufacture them relatively inexpensively at prices at least competitive with, or lower than, those of imported papers. Lower prices brought wallpaper from the purview of the elite to the realm of the middle class. Kitchens, closets, attic staircases, and even ceilings were often embellished with a variety of papers in addition to the more traditional rooms, such as parlors, dining rooms, and bedrooms. Periodicals proliferated at this time, and since many of them were targeted to women they contained abundant information and advice on home decoration. For wallpaper, their writers and editors endorsed what was currently popular in England, first highly colored and patterned Victorian papers and later the designs of the highly regarded designer William Morris. His designs for densely arranged, highly stylized floral patterns eventu ally gave way to those that featured more botanically accurate representations of flowers (many of them roses) in more open designs.

Around the beginning of the twentieth century wallpaper manufacturers began to market their products by issuing sample books, with some large firms producing two a year, while smaller manufacturers issued promotional brochures and leaflets containing their latest designs. Sample books survive in museum archives, but because they were frequently handled and exposed to light, the colors of the papers have faded.

In 1977 an extraordinary cache of more than 4,500 rolls of wallpaper representing some 1,377 patterns was discovered by members of the Brillion Historical Society in Brillion, Wisconsin. The papers had never been unrolled and therefore retained their original coloring. The hoard included papers for walls, borders, and ceilings that were manufactured in the United States. They ranged in date from about 1850 to about 1915, and included examples produced in the rococo and Renaissance revival styles as well as more rectilinear and geometric patterns that embody the arts and crafts aesthetic. The Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, which houses our nation's largest collection of wallpapers, sent members of its curatorial and archival staffs to Wisconsin to view the collection, and they recommended that the museum purchase samples of each paper. Samples were also purchased by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

The firm Victorian Collectibles in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, offers reproductions of more than one hundred examples from the Brillion collection. Among the historic houses and institutions they have supplied with wallpaper are the Edison Institute of the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan; the Kentucky Historical Society in Frankfort; and Avery House in Fort Collins, Colorado. The patterns they offer may be viewed on their Web site (www.victorianwallpaper.com). The firm may be contacted by telephone at 800-783-3829, or by fax at 414-352-7290.

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