Garden Scraps

Discover the Victorian art of scrapbooks

Scrap of a Dahlia (1900) by UnknownGarden Museum

With the invention of the chromolithography printing technique in 1837 colourful sheets of decorative images could be printed in large numbers.

Victorian Scrap featuring Perlargoniums (1890) by UnknownGarden Museum

They were embossed creating a raised three dimensional appearance and coated with a gelatine and gum film which gave them a shiny finish and stopped the paper stretching, cracking or tearing.

Victorian Scrap of Children Gardening (c.1890) by UnkownGarden Museum

These decorative scraps consisted of all sorts of themes but gardens and flowers were among some of the most popular.

Victorian Scrap of Flower-laden Wheelbarrow (1870/1890) by UnknownGarden Museum

Victorian Scraps of a Bouquet (1890) by UnknownGarden Museum

The scraps were cut out and added to family albums and journals, as people used them to decorate and record their daily lives and important events.

Victorian Scrap of Floral Cartouche (c.1890) by UnknownGarden Museum

Many were pasted into special books together with mementoes, poems, religious texts and contributions from friends and family. These became known as scrapbooks.

Victorian Scrap of Cherub and Ferns (c.1900) by UnknownGarden Museum

Victorian Scrap of A Girl Gardening (c.1900) by UnknownGarden Museum

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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