Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

All fired up: how a mania for antique Delft led to a surprise brush with AI

The Observer

|

November 30, 2025

An obsession with the blue-and-white tiles took Malika Browne to Rembrandt's house in Amsterdam, before modern technology brought the ceramic designs closer to home

- Malika Browne

All fired up: how a mania for antique Delft led to a surprise brush with AI

They started arriving in small, deceptively heavy square parcels, sometimes chipped or cracked, some still clinging to bits of wall.

The packages grew with my husband's online buying confidence and enthusiasm, although he insisted he was restricting himself to no more than £10 a tile.

My husband's Delft tile mania was unleashed by his most reckless online auction purchase to date: a wrecked 14th-century merchant's house in King's Lynn, west Norfolk. When we learned the house had belonged between 1700 and 1750 to a Dutch merchant called Jakob Van Flierden and then to his son, the collecting began in earnest.

Dutch landscapes feel familiar to the residents of East Anglia's flat, wet expanses, so we hopped over the North Sea for some inspiration. We saw Delft tiles in canal houses, as glorious expanses on chimney breasts and trompe l'oeil designs on kitchen walls, but it was their use as skirting boards and around the bottom of staircases that really made us swoon. (We need to get out more, clearly.)

Ever practical Dutch housewives did not want to damage or dirty their whitewashed walls when washing the floors, so a strip of tiles was placed as a hard-wearing buffer. Although absorbed by the paintings in Rembrandt's house, we most admired the Delft tile frieze near the floor. On closer inspection of paintings by Vermeer and de Hooch in the Rijksmuseum, the skirting was there too, miniature paintings within paintings. We vowed to replicate the look at home.

It was on our return that I realised we were not the only ones buying tiles like they were going out of fashion. On my Instagram feed, decorators referenced the tiles in historic houses, and trend-chasing Carrie Johnson, wife of the former prime minister Boris, was one of many home renovators showing off her new blue-and-white fireplace.

The Observer'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

The Observer

The Observer

Faulty and inaccessible defibrillators linked to dozens of deaths

On a Saturday afternoon in early November last year, the members of Beauchief Tennis Club in Sheffield were taking part in their annual winter league.

time to read

2 mins

November 23, 2025

The Observer

Behind the wheel I’m free. That irks some people

Motability for disabled people is no freebie, says Melanie Reid - it's sweet independence

time to read

2 mins

December 07, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Reform's record £9m crypto donation is just the latest offering from abroad

Two thirds of funds given to Nigel Farage's party this parliament have come donors with overseas interests

time to read

2 mins

December 07, 2025

The Observer

Trump’s favourite for Fed chair gets a cool reception from Wall Street

Donald Trump’s search for a new chairman of the Federal Reserve seemed to reach a conclusion last week — at least until Wall Street lobbying against his presumed choice put the announcement on ice.

time to read

3 mins

December 07, 2025

The Observer

Will the leftish parties unite to stop Nigel Farage from becoming PM?

It's time to start thinking about electoral pacts - though now it's near impossible to see how a bargain would be struck

time to read

4 mins

December 07, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

‘The Greens are anti-Nato and think it’s all right to sell drugs. That’s nuts’

Keir Starmer says the thing he misses most as prime minister is taking long, solitary hikes in the countryside.

time to read

8 mins

December 07, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Riddled with bullet holes and grief, Sangin has no choice but to remember the British

'Kill or capture' raids and 'call-out procedures' that ended in unexplained deaths in Afghanistan are at the heart of the hearing into war crimes. Oliver Marsden tours a still traumatised land

time to read

9 mins

December 07, 2025

The Observer

Aid in a post-aid world

In a world where much foreign policy is in Trumpian disarray, it is hard to spare a thought for multilateralism - just another victim in a global road crash.

time to read

4 mins

December 07, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

A year after Assad, Syria and the world wait to see if Sharaa is democrat or despot

As a grocer's son turned jihadist warlord marks the anniversary of his toppling of the regime, a shattered country still fears his intentions, report Ruth Michaelson and Saad Alnassife in Damascus

time to read

9 mins

December 07, 2025

The Observer

Nicolai Tangen: 'Even if AI is a bad bubble, it's directing capital toward change'

The CEO of Norges says markets are 'very hot' and this time it is different from the dotcom crisis, AI will be transformative, he says, but will create inequalities between developed and poorer nations

time to read

7 mins

December 07, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size