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In 1880 Achille Brunschwig established a tapestry-weaving business in Aubusson, France, which was successful enough to warrant opening a showroom in New York City in 1925. Achille's son Roger managed the American branch, which by that time had shifted from tapestries to marketing French silks and printed cottons. Showrooms were soon established in other cities in the United States, and when Roger Brunschwig returned to France to serve in World War II, his American wife Zelina, oversaw the business here. Today Brunschwig et Fils is headquartered in New York City and through offices in Paris maintains close ties to French mills and textile designers.
One of Zelina Brunschwig's passions was collecting, in particular antique textiles, which she found both in the marketplace and in houses whose owners had preserved articles of clothing and other fabrics that had descended in their families. Both her father-in-law and her husband were also avid collectors, and by the advent of World War II, they had amassed a large number of antique textiles, which they judiciously dispatched to New York City for safekeeping.
Today this collection numbers some ten thousand fabrics and other documents that pertain to the history of textile manufacture. Among the holdings are ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Design notes.(Zelinda Brunschwig's historical textile collection)