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Museum Østjylland Farvergården

This app gives you access to interesting and intriguing information, photos and film clips about Farvergården, the old dyeworks, in Ebeltoft

This app gives you access to interesting and intriguing information, photos and film clips about Farvergården, the old dyeworks, in Ebeltoft

Museum Østjylland Farvergården

by Combine A/S
Museum Østjylland Farvergården
Museum Østjylland Farvergården
Museum Østjylland Farvergården

What is it about?

This app gives you access to interesting and intriguing information, photos and film clips about Farvergården, the old dyeworks, in Ebeltoft. You will find the app useful during your visit and it also lets you explore Farvergården and its history from home!

Museum Østjylland Farvergården

App Details

Version
2.9.39
Rating
NA
Size
30Mb
Genre
Education
Last updated
January 4, 2018
Release date
June 26, 2014
More info

App Store Description

This app gives you access to interesting and intriguing information, photos and film clips about Farvergården, the old dyeworks, in Ebeltoft. You will find the app useful during your visit and it also lets you explore Farvergården and its history from home!
The app also helps children – and the young at heart – to get more out of their visit to Farvergården by following a little quiz trail.

Farvergården in Ebeltoft is a very special place. A place where time has stood still and where you can experience an old provincial dyeworks, with the dyer’s house, garden and stable buildings more or less as they were when the last dyer and his family lived and worked here at the beginning of the 20th century. Farvergården is the last surviving provincial dyeworks in northern Europe.
The last dyer, Johan Petersen, took over the dyeworks from his father in 1905 and continued to ply the old dyer’s craft until the middle of the 1920s. A craft that had the main purpose, before industrialisation, of dyeing and finishing people’s homemade cloth and yarn. A craft that was about to be made redundant by mass-produced factory goods.
As late as 1928, however, people could still bring their textiles here for dyeing – just as they had done almost without a break since the 1770s.
Thanks to Johan Petersen and his wife Kirstine, the dyeworks was preserved for posterity and today it provides us with an insight into an ancient craft and the life that went on around it.

Continued use of GPS running in the background can dramatically decrease battery life.

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