![The Public Domain Review](/static/pdr-logo_2x-a9aa17abb46a7af84cd791867a6031ec.png)
william morris
![Pens and Needles: Reviving Book-Embroidery in Victorian England](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/pens-and-needles-reviving-book-embroidery-in-victorian-england/embroidery-featured.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
Pens and Needles: Reviving Book-Embroidery in Victorian England
Fashionable in the 16th and 17th century, the art of embroidering unique covers for books saw a comeback in late 19th-century England, from the middle-class drawing room to the Arts and Crafts movement. Jessica Roberson explores the bibliomania, patriotism, and issues around gender so central to the revival. more
![“O Uommibatto”: How the Pre-Raphaelites Became Obsessed with the Wombat](https://the-public-domain-review.imgix.net/essays/o-uommibatto-how-the-pre-raphaelites-became-obsessed-with-the-wombat/burne-jones-wombat.jpg?w=600&h=1200&auto=format,compress)
“O Uommibatto”: How the Pre-Raphaelites Became Obsessed with the Wombat
Angus Trumble on Dante Gabriel Rossetti and company’s curious but longstanding fixation with the furry oddity that is the wombat — that “most beautiful of God’s creatures” which found its way into their poems, their art, and even, for a brief while, their homes. more