With today's interest in vintage interior design concepts, wallpaper featuring old-style imagery is making a huge comeback. Wallpaper has developed as a decorative art form, which is easily changed as the styles change. Many of us are interested in sprucing up the place around the holidays, so installing new or even old wallpaper can be a fun redecorating project.
Dating as far back as the early days of decorative papyrus papermaking in ancient Egypt, wallpaper as we know it has evolved over time. The Chinese first glued rice paper to walls around 200 B.C. By the 12th Century A.D., wallpaper had spread throughout Europe.
Some believe that wallpaper's imitative character - trying to look like something it's not, like chintz, tapestry, or velvet - makes the use of wallpaper a cheap option. Others embrace wallpaper's easy and transitional quality. Many folks enjoy the fact that wallpaper can bring a desired look or new feel to a room at little expense.
Some of the most popular wallpapers have been decorated with repeated images, like the wallpaper produced in 1481 for King Louis XI of France featuring angels on a blue background.
The engraver Jean-Michel Papillon invented wallpaper as we know it using block designs in a continuous pattern in 1675, but it would take another 100 years for the wallpaper printing machine to be introduced.
American papers
Wallpaper was introduced to Americans by a Philadelphia printer in the late 1730s. By the end of the 1770s, wallpaper print workshops were established in the original 13 colonies. Patriotic wallpapers were popular in the late 1700s, as were those with repeated images of fruit and flowers for dining rooms and living room walls.
The installation of wallpaper changed significantly and so did design tastes in the late 1880s. The first ready-to-use wallpaper paste came onto the scene in 1888. And, design innovations of the Art Nouveau period demonstrated wallpapers featuring organic forms from nature, scrollwork and embellishments sparked by the aesthetic ideas of art innovators Louis Comfort Tiffany and William Morris.
By the early decades of the 1900s, the golden age of wallpaper was in full swing and as many as 400 million rolls of the printed decorative papers were sold worldwide.
During this era, high-class wallpapers typically feature exotic locales, lush green landscape vistas and images of social events like polo matches and hunting scenes. In fact, animals of all kinds were among the most popular features on wallpapers of the early 20th century. Dogs, cats, rabbits and fish made wallpaper imagery all the rage.
In the mid 1900s, wallpaper was popular with young American families setting up housekeeping in new Levittown homes after World War II. Printed and playful images on wallpaper provided an inexpensive and long-wearing interior design solution. New materials of the day, including plastics and resins, changed the wallpaper industry when mid-century modern wallpapers boasted durability and strength.
Old is new
However, in the market today, collectors have been known to feature even small pieces of antique and vintage wallpaper as framed works of art. Full rolls of wallpaper dating back to the 1800s rarely come onto the collectibles market, yet there have been some wallpapers sold on the antiques market dating back to the Victorian era and to the Roaring 20s (that is, the golden age of wallpaper). It is rare for large pieces of antique wallpaper to come to market, so large supplies of old wallpaper command high prices for their rarity when sold at auction or online.
Recent advances in digital printing techniques have allowed the replication of historic images and the production of decorative papers. Large scale vinyl cut-out decals and silhouette images are adhered to walls along with life size full-color photographs of football and baseball players. These new images have ushered in a new generation of wallpapers.
(Dr. Lori presents antique appraisal events nationwide and is an appraiser on Discovery channel's Auction Kings. Learn about your antiques at www.DrLoriV.com, www.Facebook.com/DoctorLori or call (888) 431-1010.)