This exquisite textile originates from France, produced circa 1906, and serves as a scholarly example of the refined roller-printed cottons that defined the European Art Nouveau movement. Measuring 30 inches by 18 inches (76 cm x 46 cm), the piece is a high-quality cretonne (glazed cotton) manufactured by the renowned Scheurer company in Alsace. This specific sample was acquired from a Parisian auction and remarkably retains its original archival label specifying design details and fabric content. While the textile features two original selvedges and remains in excellent condition with vibrant pigments, it bears authentic evidence of its history in the form of small holes and tearing along the edges where it was professionally removed from a stapled sample book.
The visual narrative is a rhythmic, vertical arrangement of stylized Art Nouveau florals rendered in a sophisticated palette of dusty pink and soft sage green against a clean cream field. The design features large, chalice-like blooms supported by elegant, elongated stems and whiplash-curve leaves, characteristic of the movement's obsession with organic symmetry. Because this textile was stored away from light for over a century within a sample book, the delicate pinks and complex greens have maintained their original saturation and depth, offering a rare, pristine look at early 20th-century French interior aesthetics.