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A green book cover with green illustrations of plants. In the middle there is a small orange illustration of a skull and bones and in orange font it reads

Bitten by Witch Fever

Regular price £30.00 Sale

Beautiful to leaf through and compelling to read, ‘Bitten by Witch Fever’ is a highly original and captivating volume that interleaves facsimile sections of alluring, arsenic-laden wallpapers, all laboratory-tested for the first time, with thought-provoking narrative, tracing the arresting story of the manufacture, uses and effects of arsenic in the 19th-century home, in particular, the pigments ingrained in popular wallpapers.

In this book, which was written in association with The National Archives, you will discover how pigments, such as Scheele’s green and Schweinfurt green, were created using arsenic to produce vibrant and durable dyes, which became instant favourites with wallpaper designers and householders alike.

Drawing on contemporary case studies and reports in the press, this book highlights how, by the middle of the century, manufacturers were producing millions of rolls of arsenical wallpaper, with devastating consequences for those working in their factories and for those living in rooms decorated with the deadly designs. The wallpaper sections display dazzling long-lost work from the great designers and printers of the age, including Christopher Dresser, Corbière, Son & Brindle, Charles Knowles & Co. and Morris & Co. – whose owner was famously dismissive of the fatal effects of living within arsenic-laden walls.

It wasn’t only wallpaper manufacturers, however, that used arsenical colours in the production process. Arsenice dyes were used for furnishing textiles, such as curtains and bedclothes; in the fashion industry for clothes and accessories; and even in the production of food colourings. Bitten By Witch Fever looks at the ubiquity of arsenic in the Victorian home, and in Victorian murders.

  • Hardback
  • 232 pages
  • Published 2016
  • ISBN 9780500518380