The Fabric Workshop and Museum Store

The Fabric Workshop and Museum Store Artist-made gifts found nowhere else. Discover home goods, hand bags, and wearables with artsy flair.

Happy birthday to artist Will Stokes, Jr., who creates lively, gestural depictions of people and animals amid playful en...
11/05/2024

Happy birthday to artist Will Stokes, Jr., who creates lively, gestural depictions of people and animals amid playful environments.

A longtime collaborator with our Studio and one of our earliest apprentices, "Willie” has printed many yardage designs over the years.

Get his alligator, teddy bear, book, or puzzle at the FWM Store: https://bit.ly/3YQkBeU


Photo credit: Carlos Avendaño

  to artist Bob Bingham, whose work explores issues of consumerism, the influence of the mass media, and subliminal sedu...
10/29/2024

to artist Bob Bingham, whose work explores issues of consumerism, the influence of the mass media, and subliminal seduction. ⁠

As a sculptor, Bingham sets out to question our ordinary use of space and situates recognizable objects in unexpected environments. This is most clearly expressed in his Brick yardage design, which he created with the FWM Studio in 1986. ⁠

Experience this playfully deceptive design as a tent in our exhibition, . Free tickets>> https://bit.ly/FWMSoftCover

Or get your own: Brick is available as a passport bag, tote, throw pillow, or bolster in the FWM Store>> https://bit.ly/4f0kB1p



Images: Bob Bingham, in collaboration with FWM. Brick, 1986. FWM Archives; Other photos: Carlos Avendaño.

10/14/2024

Now entering SPOOKY SZN 🦇🐈‍⬛

Next Friday and Saturday, visit the FWM Store for a fall and Halloween-themed plush pop-up with THECOLORG!

Artist Ash Garner will be here to share the step-by-step process of designing and sewing these charming creatures and will have plenty of plush critters ready to be adopted.

Plan your visit: https://bit.ly/3ZZndYM

Photo credit: Carlos Avendaño.

How did a dishtowel help to end the Civil War? Why do we all know the Confederate Battle Flag and not the Confederate Fl...
03/23/2024

How did a dishtowel help to end the Civil War? Why do we all know the Confederate Battle Flag and not the Confederate Flag of Truce? 

Today, we’re launching a limited-edition print with artist Sonya Clark ( ), , that continues the conversation she began with these questions during her FWM residency in 2019. 

Produced in a limited edition of 1865—the year of the Confederate surrender— “Confederate Truce Flag (monumental dishtowel)” raises the forgotten rag that signaled the end of the American Civil War and the eventual end of slavery in the US. 

$75 per edition. Now available at the FWM Store and , where a mid-career survey of the artist’s work “We Are Each Other” opens today.⁠ 

Images: Sonya Clark, in collaboration with The Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia. Digital print on linen-cotton, 18 x 36 inches; Edition of 1865. Photo credit:

Address

1214 Arch Street
Philadelphia, PA
19107

Opening Hours

Wednesday 12pm - 6pm
Thursday 12pm - 6pm
Friday 12pm - 6pm
Saturday 12pm - 5pm
Sunday 12pm - 5pm

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+12125618888

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