Thérèse de Dillmont (1846–1890)
Author of The Complete Encyclopedia of Needlework
About the Author
Image credit: Therese De Dillmont (1846-1890)
Works by Thérèse de Dillmont
Embroidery on Net 4 copies
Czecho-Slovakian Embroideries 3 copies
Cross Stitch (3rd Series) 3 copies
Drawn thread work 2nd series 2 copies
Needle-made laces 2 copies
Motifs for Embroideries 6th Series 2 copies
Le filet brodé 2 copies
Turkish embroideries (DMC Library) 2 copies
Embroidery on Tulle 1st Series 2 copies
Les jours sur toile 2 copies
DIE KLÖPPELSPITZEN. II Serie 1 copy
Broderies ajourées sur toile 1 copy
Motifs pour broderies 1 copy
Marking Stitch IIIrd Series 1 copy
Encyclopedia of Embroidery 1 copy
Encyclopedia of Needlework 1 copy
Knotted fringes OVERSIZE 1 copy
L'Uncinetto 1 copy
Point de Croix 8me Série 1 copy
Die Durchbruch Arbeit 1 copy
Die Nadel Spitzen 1te Serie 1 copy
Marking Stitch 2nd Series 1 copy
The Net Work 1 copy
Knitting: IIIrd Series 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Dillmont, Thérèse de
- Other names
- Dillmont, Thérèse Maria Josepha de
Von Dillmont, Therese Maria Josefa Dillman - Birthdate
- 1846-10-10
- Date of death
- 1890-05-22
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- Austria (birth)
- Birthplace
- Vienna, Austria
- Place of death
- Baden Baden, Germany
- Places of residence
- Dornach, France
Vienna, Austria
Alsace, France - Education
- Royal Academy of Embroidery, Vienna
- Occupations
- writer
textile historian
embroiderer
embroidery teacher - Relationships
- Dillmont, Thérèse de (niece and successor)
- Short biography
- Thérèse de Dillmont was born in Wiener Neustadt, south of Vienna, the youngest of five children. Her father Ferdinand de Dillmont was a military officer and professor of architecture at the Military Academy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. She was educated to be a governess and teacher, and attended an embroidery school in Vienna founded by the Empress Marie-Theresa. In 1884, she moved to France, where she wrote her Complete Encyclopedia of Needlework. It contained thousands of textile designs from many different countries including Egypt, Bulgaria, Turkey and China. She also founded her own textile school at Dornach near the French city of Mulhouse, and travelled often to oversee shops she opened in Vienna, London, Paris, and Berlin. The Alsatian-French company DMC, with which she had worked, continued to publish books with needlework designs under her name after her death.
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Statistics
- Works
- 92
- Members
- 1,225
- Popularity
- #20,958
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 63
- ISBNs
- 41
- Languages
- 4