Embroidered pillow cases and other artefacts in Hungary
On an imaginary list of eminent representatives of traditional Hungarian folk art one of the highest ranking items would no doubt be the Matyó embroidery.
The home of this extremely rich form of textile decoration is the small town of Mezõkövesd, situated in the North Eastern part of the country. Although the origins of the name are unclear, it is thought to be related to the great Hungarian King Matthias (Matyas).
The earliest known pieces date back to the mid-1800s and were applied on the borders of bedsheets, on pillow cases, shirt sleeves and aprons. To the originally used red and blue threads later more and more other colors were added, resulting in an eye-pleasing teeming of vibrating colors, from bright yellow through emerald green to mauve and even the wildest violet. These lively stitches bundle together to form endless troops of flowers, buds, leaves stylized boots and birds. So densely are the motifs actually applied that the white and black background fabric hardly show between them.
Although most Matyó women learnt and practised embroidery,