A group of Italian Renaissance velvet textiles, created over three
cen-turies as part of the mercantile system, were traded over time in
Europe until 1927, when they were shipped to the U.S. as educational
objects. Traded again, they eventually came to rest as the Cranbrook
Collection, laying undisturbed for over fifty years in the archives of
the New Brunswick Museum in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada. These
fragments form the basis for this thesis, which outlines a process of
digitally recording textile fragments, illustrating a procedure for
crea-ting a virtual silk mill for museum display and Internet use,
showing how a digital collection of textile images can be used in a
virtual museum setting. The importance of digital technology in the
learning environment, as a tool for classroom and online course delivery
in crafts, textile design and museum study is also discussed, including
a sample lesson plan using digitised textile designs.