From feed sack to clothes rack : the use of commodity textile bags in American households from 1890-1960.
Call Number:
P14691
Date:
2012
Description:
Printout of electronic article from: University of Nebraska-Lincoln, DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Issued as: Textile Society of America Symposium Proceedings, paper 732.
Serial. Printed Ephemera Collection has: 2015:summer. Issue for summer 2015 includes article: Vintage feedsacks : collector cherishes humble fabric from the farm, by Marti Attoun.
Subject Personal:
McGinnis, Edie.
Subject Topical:
Bagging., Cotton fabrics--United States., Cooking--Periodicals., Feeds--Packaging., Flour--Packaging., Home economics, Rural--Periodicals., Country life--Periodicals.
All:
Bagging., Cotton fabrics--United States., McGinnis, Edie., Feeds--Packaging., Flour--Packaging., Home economics, Rural--Periodicals., Country life--Periodicals., Cooking--Periodicals.
Textile Bag Manufacturers Association (Chicago, Ill.)
Title:
Sewing with cotton bags.
Call Number:
P19675
Date:
undated
Description:
Pamphlet. Fashion and other household item illustrations depict plain or dyed plain cotton bag fabric only, which suggests that the pamphlet was probably published prior to the 1926 patented use of dress print goods to make cotton agricultural commodity bags.
Bagging., Cotton fabrics--United States., Children's clothing--West Virginia--Arthurdale., Dresses--West Virginia--Arthurdale--1950-1960., Feeds--Packaging., West, Mary Francis Carlson., Carlson, Martha Ellen, -1954., New Deal Homestead Museum (Arthurdale, W. Va.)