




Didier Floral. Circa 1750.
Hand Made Block Printed Wallpaper.
An authentic recreation of a circa 1750 Formal floral arrangement pattern, this hand made domino wallpaper exemplifies the sophisticated elegance of mid-Georgian / Colonial (USA) design. Produced using traditional two-block printing methods with hand-carved pear wood blocks and historic distemper paint recipes, each sheet is printed individually on an oar press in the Cotswolds workshop of James Randolph Rogers.
About This Design
This historic wallpaper reproduction recreates an authentic circa 1750 formal floral pattern using traditional domino paper methods from the mid-Georgian period. Didier Floral represents the sophisticated aesthetic of early 18th-century interior decoration, when elaborate botanical arrangements adorned the walls of fashionable townhouses and country estates throughout Britain, France, and the American colonies. These richly composed floral designs required considerable technical skill to produce, with their layered printing and precise registration marking them as premium decorative choices for principal reception rooms and formal bedchambers.
The pattern’s structured composition and balanced proportions reflect the refined tastes of the 1740s-1760s, when French-influenced design dominated fashionable interiors across Europe and colonial America. Such formal floral arrangements were particularly favoured in prosperous merchant households and gentry residences, where they demonstrated both cultural sophistication and economic means. The two-block printing technique required for this pattern placed it amongst the more costly wallpaper options of the period, making surviving examples relatively rare in historic house collections.
Hand Made Production Method
Each sheet of this bespoke wallpaper is produced entirely by hand using authentic pre-1830s techniques. The pattern is block printed from two hand-carved pear wood printing blocks—the traditional medium favoured by Georgian dominotiers for its fine grain and durability. These blocks work in precise registration to build up the layered floral design, with each colour requiring a separate printing pass. The blocks are carefully inked with hand-mixed distemper paints, formulated according to historic recipes using natural pigments and animal glue binders that replicate the characteristic matt finish of 18th-century wallpapers.
The printing process employs an oar press, applying even, controlled pressure to transfer each design element onto individual sheets measuring 62.5 x 49 cm (37½ x 19¼ inches). This sheet-by-sheet hand made production method, unchanged since the Georgian period, ensures each length retains the subtle variations and authentic character of historic domino papers. The two-block printing technique demands considerable skill to achieve consistent colour saturation, precise registration between printing passes, and the crisp definition essential to formal floral patterns.
Historical Context and Authenticity
Formal floral wallpapers flourished across mid-Georgian Britain and colonial America during the 1740s-1760s, representing the height of rococo-influenced design before the emergence of neoclassical taste. The sophistication of patterns like Didier Floral made them accessible primarily to prosperous households—wealthy merchants in London and Bristol, landed gentry in the Home Counties, and successful planters in Virginia and the Carolinas—who could afford the additional expense of multi-block printing for their principal rooms.
This historic wallpaper recreation derives from careful study of circa 1750 examples preserved in heritage collections, maintaining both the technical production methods and the aesthetic sensibilities of the period. The name “Didier” references the tradition of French dominotiers whose designs influenced English and colonial production throughout the 18th century. The commitment to authentic hand made manufacture ensures the wallpaper possesses the distinctive surface quality, colour depth, and visual texture characteristic of genuine Georgian domino wallpaper, whether destined for a period townhouse restoration, a historic country house, or a colonial-era residence.
Bespoke Specifications and Ordering
This block printed wallpaper is produced to order on individual sheets measuring 62.5 x 49 cm (37½ x 19¼ inches), reflecting the larger format paper dimensions sometimes used for premium Georgian wallpapers. Pricing is , with a minimum order requirement of Minimum order 0f 50 sheets covers 15.4 m² = £5000.
All bespoke colour schemes are mixed specifically for each commission to suit your interior requirements. Historic colour palettes for formal floral patterns typically ranged from rich terre verte and Prussian blue grounds to warm ochre and vermillion accents, though contemporary colour interpretations can be accommodated whilst maintaining period-appropriate distemper paint characteristics. Volume orders exceeding 100 sheets receive a 20% discount, making larger projects more economical whilst maintaining uncompromising quality and authenticity.
