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<p>[QUOTE="Joan, post: 9987506, member: 5398"]Your linens are gorgeous. If your trunk includes more than what you’ve pictured, you might have some Marghab linens, which were hand embroidered on Madeira and were sold at Marshall Fields, Neiman Marcus and other high end stores before the Marghab company closed in 1980. Some Marghab linens have sold recently on eBay for hundreds of dollars.</p><p><br /></p><p>If you only have what’s shown in your photos, I don’t think they’re Marghab, except possibly the white organdy tea cloth and napkins, but I haven’t been able to find examples like them online. By the way, the note with them should say “embroidered” not embossed.</p><p><br /></p><p>If you do have other linens in the trunk with embroidery, and would care to post photos I might be able to tell you if they’re Marghab. Or, you could do a Google image search or check eBay “sold” listings to see if they might be Marghab. A word of caution, however, not all linens shown online as Marghab are actually Marghab. They didn’t come with a label, usually a paper card and/or Marghab box.</p><p><br /></p><p>I’ve sold and still have a few examples of Marghab linens. The quality and detail of the embroidery is exquisite and beyond most other embroidery--at least that I’ve seen.</p><p><br /></p><p>For anyone who’s not familiar with Marghab, the following information is from Wikipedia: The company was founded in 1933 on Madeira (an island belonging to Portugal) by Emile and Vera Marghab. Vera (who was from South Dakota) designed all the linens herself, hired the women on Madeira to do the hand-embroidery as a home industry, and paid them per stitch, which for a single place mat could amount to seventy thousand stitches.</p><p><br /></p><p>Vera died in 1995. She and her trustees have gifted numerous Marghab linens to the University of South Dakota Art Museum, which now includes over three hundred patterns and almost 2800 items.</p><p><br /></p><p>Here’s a set of 6 Marghab cocktail napkins that sold recently on Etsy:</p><p>[ATTACH=full]501543[/ATTACH][/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Joan, post: 9987506, member: 5398"]Your linens are gorgeous. If your trunk includes more than what you’ve pictured, you might have some Marghab linens, which were hand embroidered on Madeira and were sold at Marshall Fields, Neiman Marcus and other high end stores before the Marghab company closed in 1980. Some Marghab linens have sold recently on eBay for hundreds of dollars. If you only have what’s shown in your photos, I don’t think they’re Marghab, except possibly the white organdy tea cloth and napkins, but I haven’t been able to find examples like them online. By the way, the note with them should say “embroidered” not embossed. If you do have other linens in the trunk with embroidery, and would care to post photos I might be able to tell you if they’re Marghab. Or, you could do a Google image search or check eBay “sold” listings to see if they might be Marghab. A word of caution, however, not all linens shown online as Marghab are actually Marghab. They didn’t come with a label, usually a paper card and/or Marghab box. I’ve sold and still have a few examples of Marghab linens. The quality and detail of the embroidery is exquisite and beyond most other embroidery--at least that I’ve seen. For anyone who’s not familiar with Marghab, the following information is from Wikipedia: The company was founded in 1933 on Madeira (an island belonging to Portugal) by Emile and Vera Marghab. Vera (who was from South Dakota) designed all the linens herself, hired the women on Madeira to do the hand-embroidery as a home industry, and paid them per stitch, which for a single place mat could amount to seventy thousand stitches. Vera died in 1995. She and her trustees have gifted numerous Marghab linens to the University of South Dakota Art Museum, which now includes over three hundred patterns and almost 2800 items. Here’s a set of 6 Marghab cocktail napkins that sold recently on Etsy: [ATTACH=full]501543[/ATTACH][/QUOTE]
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