
Embroidered Border
Collection
Museum-quality reproductions on 310gsm textured cotton rag paper.
Shop all prints by William MorrisArtistic Style
Style Evolution
Morris began with medieval and natural sources, developing richly patterned textiles and wallpapers in his middle period; later he expanded into book design and publishing while maintaining a commitment to handcrafted processes and socially engaged aesthetics.
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William Morris (1834-1896) was a British Arts and Crafts designer, writer, and socialist whose richly patterned textiles and book designs transformed decorative arts.
Learn about the life of William Morris
Biography
Official websiteWilliam Morris (1834-1896) was a British Arts and Crafts designer, writer, and socialist whose richly patterned textiles, wallpapers, and typographic work reshaped decorative arts and championed craft against industrial mass production.
William Morris was born in Walthamstow in 1834 and later lived and worked in London, including Hammersmith where he died in 1896. Educated at Oxford, he trained among literary and artistic circles that fostered his interest in medieval art and craft traditions. His upbringing and education gave him a foundation in literature, medievalism, and a commitment to combining beauty with everyday utility.
Morris's career unfolded across several overlapping practices: design, printmaking, book production, and political writing. He moved from early design experiments into collaborative workshops and publishing ventures.
In his early career Morris developed the repeat-pattern textile and wallpaper designs that would become his signature, drawing on plant forms, medieval motifs, and hand-crafted techniques.
Morris established a design firm and collaborative workshop model that prioritized artisanal craft and integrated design into domestic interiors. He promoted hand-block printing and close collaboration between designers and craftspeople.
Later in life Morris expanded into book design and publishing, producing typographic work and writings that reflected his social and aesthetic ideals, while advocating for socialist reform and the dignity of labor.
Morris is best known for his textile and wallpaper designs and for founding an influential design workshop and publishing enterprise that set new standards for decorative arts and book production. His achievements include pioneering production methods that emphasized handcrafted quality and reviving traditional decorative motifs for modern interiors.
Morris favored hand-crafted processes: block printing for textiles and wallpapers, careful pattern repeats, dense vegetal ornament, and attention to materiality. His designs balance formal symmetry with lively organic detail, using pattern to animate walls and fabrics.
Morris was a central figure in the Arts and Crafts movement, influencing generations of designers, architects, and craftspeople who sought to reunite art and craft. His emphasis on craft, social purpose, and integrated interiors shaped design education and decorative taste into the 20th century and remains influential in contemporary craft and heritage design.
Morris combined artistic practice with political and literary activity, writing on art, society, and history while organizing workshops that embodied his social ideals. He lived and worked in domestic and communal settings that integrated
Frequently Asked Questions

Embroidered Border

Venus (or Aphrodite)

Woman Holding a Small Book

Woman Drinking from a Fountain

Woman Gathering Fruit