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The striking op-art target design on this 1970s cotton textile from Norway has been screenprinted in warm mid brown onto a white background and would make a strong statement artwork framed or mounted on a stretcher. Measuring 88 x 82 cm, the textile is in very good condition with minor evidence of p..
£80.00
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Produced in Denmark in the 1970s, this cotton textile has a strong, large-scale geometric design in dark chocolate brown and brick orange on a white background. Measuring 143 cm in width and 236 cm in length and raw at top and bottom edges, the fabric has never been used and remains in as-new condit..
£130.00
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This lightweight, lightly slubbed, satiny fabric is a vintage manmade textile in mint, unused condition. Printed with a bold abstract pattern in aubergine, stone, salmon pink, sky blue, turquoise, lime green and pale peppermint, the fabric measures 129cm in width and 128 cm in length and is unfinish..
£19.00
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Produced by Södahl Design A/S of Denmark in the 1970s, this heavy, canvas-like circular tablecloth has a diameter of 150 cm and is screenprinted with geometric targets design in multiple shades of red, magenta and orange and finished with a narrow band of orange cotton piping. The tablecloth shows e..
£85.00
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This vibrantly colourful vintage but apparently unused fabric was produced in Sweden in the 1960s and has a psychedelic floral design in the style of Josef Frank, the Austrian architect whose work had a profound effect on Swedish postwar textile design. Screenprinted in red, orange, pink, apricot an..
£85.00
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This vintage fabric panel was purchased in Köping in Västmanland, Sweden, and its vividly colourful print of stylised flowers is highly typical of Swedish textile design in the postwar period as exemplified by Josef Frank, Viola Gråsten and Saini Salonen. Measuring 90 cm wide and 257 cm long, the fi..
£140.00
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Measuring 121 x 32cm each and offered for sale as a pair, these vintage table/sideboard/credenza runners were acquired in Sweden, and their bold semi-abstract silkscreen-printed floral artwork is typical of 1960s–70s Swedish textile design. The fabric is a jute-polyester mix printed in emerald, lime..
£99.00
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This huge and heavy canvas-like cotton textile was made in Sweden in the 1970s and is a classic Swedish midcentury modern design of a stylised tree trunk and branches with autumnal leaves and small flowers in the style of Viola Gråsten. Measuring 147 x 235 cm and finished on all edges, the textile i..
£85.00
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Purchased in Sweden, this vintage midcentury textile measures 117 x 189 cm and is hemmed at top and bottom edges. A high-quality medium-weight slubbed fabric typical of Swedish furnishing textiles in the postwar midcentury era and particularly characteristic of companies like Boras Wafveri, the magn..
£75.00
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A pair of 1960s Danish tablemats in excellent condition made from a heavy slubbed cotton fabric and each measuring 30 x 40 cm. Price is for the pair...
£12.00
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This large 100% cotton textile was produced by Tampella of Tampere, Finland in the 1970s and sports a bold graphic artwork in the distinctive Finnish midcentury modern style. Entitled Pulteri, the design is  screenprinted in bright tomato red and black on a bright white background. The fabric m..
£150.00
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Brand: Mira-X
Purchased in Denmark and offered for sale as a set of 6, these tablemats were made in the 1970s in a style popular in Denmark at that time of an oval shaped mat finished with cotton binding. The fabric used was Verner Panton's geometric wave-like Curve design in red, part of the Mira-Spectrum series..
£240.00
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Original Scandinavian modern fabrics from the 50s, 60s & 70s

What's special about vintage modern Scandinavian fabrics?

Modern Scandinavian textile design in the period spanning the late 1950s through to the late 1970s can be roughly divided into three broad style categories:
Stylised designs taken from nature, especially trees, leaves and flowers, as seen in the work of textile designers such as Josef Frank, Saini Salonen and Viola Gråsten. These designs are especially prevalent in Swedish textiles from the postwar period, with prominent producers including Borås Wäfveri.
Geometric designs as seen in the work of designers such as Verner Panton. Outside Scandinavia, geometric fabric designs were also very popular in the midcentury era in Germany and the UK, with artists including Barbara Brown and Peter Perritt designing textiles for prestigious companies such as Heals.
Semi-abstract art designs as seen in the work of fabric designers like Maija Isola and Marjatta Metsovaara. Textiles in this style were especially popular in Finland, where designs tended to be particularly bold and on a very large scale and were produced by companies including Marimekko, Tampella and Finlayson. In the UK, Heals and David Whitehead also produced many fabrics in this style, with notable designers including Lucienne Day, Marian Mahler and John Piper.

Many of the best Scandinavian modern fabric designs from this era have proved to be perennial classics that have continued to resonate throughout the 50-plus years since they were created. Indeed, a number of such designs have been brought back into production, sometimes in new colourways, and their influence can also be seen in many of today's contemporary fabric designs. The quality of the original fabrics and print techniques from the 50s, 60s and 70s are, however, rarely if ever matched by today's productions, while the colours of the originals tend to be more distinctively characteristic of their era.

How to use Scandinavian fabrics from the 50s, 60s & 70s

We often use these stunning vintage fabrics in the way they were originally intended – as curtains, as tablemats and tablecloths, or as headscarves. But our favourite tip is to use them as wall hangings, which emphasises their identity as the works of art they really are and is also a really easy and cost-effective way to introduce a strong Scandinavian midcentury modern ambience into a room.