Loading...
hidden

View Mobile version

Meta navigation

Startseite – Hochschule Luzern

Language selection and important links

  • Contents
  • Contact
  • Login
  • De
  • En
Search

Main navigation

School navigation

  • Engineering and Architecture
  • Business
  • Computer Science
  • Social Work
  • Design, Film and Art​
  • Music
  • Health Sciences

Sub-navigation

  • Degree Programmes
  • Continuing Education
  • Research
  • International
  • Campus
  • About us
  • News

Sub-navigation

Breadcrumbs

  1. Research Research
  2. Research and Services Projects Research and Services Projects
  3. Flexibility and Design. A History of Technology and Fashion in the Swiss Silk Industry, 1880 – 1914 Flexibility and Design. A History of Technology and Fashion in the Swiss Silk Industry, 1880 – 1914

Flexibility and Design. A History of Technology and Fashion in the Swiss Silk Industry, 1880 – 1914

This research project analyses design processes in the Swiss silk industry from 1880 to 1914 and is a contribution to the international history of design.

Brief information

School:

Design, Film and Art​

Status:

Completed

Period:

01.01.2014 - 31.03.2020

Overview

History of design has so far primarily been practised within the frameworks of art and cultural history. Focusing on the Swiss silk industry this project argues, however, that design has much to gain from being analysed within the framework of the history of technology. Understood to be a process rather than a product, design shaped all stages of production – from research and development to distribution and marketing – of the fashionable textiles which Swiss companies made for markets around the globe, from New York to St. Petersburg.

In the second half of the long 19th century the silk industry, specialising in broad dress fabrics and based in the region around Lake Zurich, became one of the largest sectors of the Swiss economy with an annual turnover of more than 100 million francs. This project argues that this growth was due not only to the price but also to the design of the silks produced. Being the most expensive and luxurious of all traditional fibres, silk was much more linked to high fashion and conspicuous consumption than were cotton, linen or wool. And just as in this period Paris-based high fashion not only established itself as a global trendsetter but also evolved ever more rapidly and unpredictably, only manufacturers who were able to create textiles in line with the latest fashions could hope to succeed.

The archives of the Zurich silk industry show that the flexibility of the design process was the key to successful manufacturing. On the one hand, extensive textile archives not only served manufacturers as references, marketing tools and a source of inspiration for new designs. They also contained a wealth of information and know-how, thus enabling the rapid (re-)creation or adaptation of any type of textile or pattern – no matter how innovative the design was or how long it had been out of fashion. Written records, on the other hand, not only reveal a complex network linking factory owners to external service providers such as dyers, marketing experts, freelance designers and commodity traders; they also show that confidence was derived from a high degree of flexibility in the design process because this allowed for quick reactions to changing international fashions.

The empirical base for this research project consists of the archives of more than a dozen Zurich silk manufacturers recently transferred to public collections. Analysing these archives within the framework of the history of technology, this research project scrutinises the role of actors, tools, places and discourses shaping the very processes by which the Swiss silk industry arrived at designs fit for a global luxury market.

Since April 2016 this research project is undertaken by Denise Ruisinger in a joint PhD between Lucerne University and ETH Zürich.

Pattern Book, Robt. Schwarzenbach & Co. AG, Thalwil, Jacquard silk, June 1900 , © private collection / HSLU
hidden

Facts

Type of project

Forschung

Internal organisations involved
  • Design, Film and Art​
  • CC Products Textiles
External project partner
  • ETH, Institut für Geschichte, Technikgeschichte
Funding
  • SNF-HSLU als Hauptgesuchsteller/in
hidden

Persons involved: internal

Project manager
  • Alexis Schwarzenbach
Member of project team
  • Denise Ruisinger
hidden

Persons involved: external

External Project Co-Head
  • David Gugerli

Brief information

School:

Design, Film and Art​

Status:

Completed

Period:

01/01/2014 - 03/31/2020

Footer(s)

FH Zentralschweiz

Social media links

  •  Instagram
  •  LinkedIn
  •  TikTok
  •  Facebook
  •  YouTube
  •  Flickr

Contact

Logo Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts

Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts


Werftestrasse 4
6002 Luzern

+41 41 228 42 42

info@hslu.ch

Direct entry

  • Bachelor’s Degree
  • Master’s Degree
  • Prospective Students (Continuing & Executive Programmes)
  • For Students
  • For Employees

Quick link

  • People Finder
  • University Buildings & Campus Locations
  • News
  • Libraries
  • Events
  • Media Relations
  • Jobs and Careers
  • Home
  • Hiring Rooms

Static links

  • Newsletter
  • Data protection notice
  • Publishing Acknowledgements
Logo Swissuniversities

QrCode

QrCode