S&B – Excellence And Diversity
Patchwork and Quilting|March 2018

As part of the Heritage Open Days held each year by English Heritage, Standfast & Barracks, a fabric printing company in Lancaster, opened its doors which meant visitors could go behind the walls of the severe Victorian building and take a glimpse into the world of printing fabric. Having only ever dyed fabrics with lots of water and messy dyes in my kitchen and printed with wooden blocks on fabric, I was intrigued to see behind the scenes.

Sheilah Daughtree
S&B – Excellence And Diversity

Standfast & Barracks have become one of the best and distinctive fabric printers in the world for the premiere designers in home furnishings and design-led apparel; Morris & Co, Zoffany and Sanderson to name just three. They can offer over 100 types of base cloth of both natural fibres of cotton, linen, silk, wool, velvet and man-made fabrics including nylon, polyester and Trevira, an inflexible fabric used for printing specialised furnishings such as for train seats etc. The fabrics come from many parts of the world; cotton from America, linen from Belgium, silk from Asia and wool from various places.

I knew that S&B had the latest inkjet digital technology that could print an infinitesimal amount of colour combinations and that it was a far cry from my humble printing and the early 1820s roller printing that could only print two or three colours. The colour range was fabulous when I saw the finished product. In 2016 they scooped their first ‘Gold Award’ at the BIBAs (Be Inspired Business Award) at which they were crowned Best Manufacturer. An extraordinary achievement considering they did not have a working factory the year before!

This story is from the March 2018 edition of Patchwork and Quilting.

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This story is from the March 2018 edition of Patchwork and Quilting.

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S&B – Excellence And Diversity
Patchwork and Quilting

S&B – Excellence And Diversity

As part of the Heritage Open Days held each year by English Heritage, Standfast & Barracks, a fabric printing company in Lancaster, opened its doors which meant visitors could go behind the walls of the severe Victorian building and take a glimpse into the world of printing fabric. Having only ever dyed fabrics with lots of water and messy dyes in my kitchen and printed with wooden blocks on fabric, I was intrigued to see behind the scenes.

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Patchwork and Quilting

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Patchwork and Quilting

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Patchwork and Quilting

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Patchwork and Quilting

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Patchwork and Quilting

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Patchwork and Quilting

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Patchwork and Quilting

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Patchwork and Quilting

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Patchwork and Quilting

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