Bed Blanket Coat “Manta da Cama Coat"

Dublin Core

Title

Bed Blanket Coat “Manta da Cama Coat"

Description

Helena Cardoso is a Portuguese designer and visual artist. Cardoso has worked since the late ‘70s, with several artisans specialising in different handmade techniques and materials in northern Portugal, especially traditional Portuguese crafts. Cardoso has been active in the areas of product design, fashion design, interior design, jewellery, social design and visual art. Regarding her work at villages, Cardoso officially started, in 1982, her partnership as a tutor with the Commission on the Status of Women –CCF (nowadays it is called CIG- Commission for Citizenship and Gender Equality) and worked to support groups of women in underprivileged villages in northern Portugal until the present day. In 2010, Cabeceiras de Basto City Council invited designer Helena Cardoso to work with artisan women, resulting in a set of new contemporary pieces (some of which use industrial wool), while maintaining the traditional way of making them. The designer was inspired to create the Manta de Cama Coat, which uses ancestral weaving skills —the chequered pattern—, but replaces the colour palette (blacks, oranges, and browns) with a monochromatic one (white and black) with brightly coloured accents using rags of burel.

Creator

Design by Helena Cardoso handcrafted by the artisans Bucos Women of Casa da Lã group 2023

Source

3portugal,craftedobjects,portugalobjects

Contributor

iain

Type

Physical Object

Identifier

86

Date Submitted

17/03/2025

Date Modified

17/03/2025

Extent

107cm x 58cm x cm

Spatial Coverage

current,41.5729836,-8.0416041;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

Universidade de Aveiro

Object

https://culturality.museum/3-portugal/

Europeana Type

TEXT

Physical Object Item Type Metadata

Prim Media

110

Natural Cultural

Cultural

Citation

Design by Helena Cardoso handcrafted by the artisans Bucos Women of Casa da Lã group 2023 , “Bed Blanket Coat “Manta da Cama Coat",” VERAP, accessed May 5, 2025, https://culturality.museum/omeka/items/show/111.

Embed

Copy the code below into your web page