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Since 1919 a vast number of textile works, designed by
Märta Måås-Fjetterström and many later artists has
been woven at the studio in Båstad. These works are to be found in
royal palaces as well as in private homes, in museums and leading institutions
throughout the world. For example:
Royal Residences – Sweden, Norway, Denmark,
The United Kingdom, Belgium and The Netherlands.
Private homes in Sweden and abroad.
Corporations – ABB, Advokatfirman Vinge,
Akademiska Hus, AstraZeneca,
Atlas Copco, Copenhagen Stock Exchange, Ericsson, Fjärde AP-fonden,
Folksam, Handelsbanken, LKAB, Lindab,Nordea, Peab, SEB, SKF, Scania, Swedbank,
TetraPak, Zoégas, and CV Search.
Government Buildings and Embassies – United Nations,
Swedish Ministry
of Justice, Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Swedish Supreme Court,
The Government Offices of Sweden, LO-Sweden; numerous Swedish Embassies, including
Brasilia, Buenos Aires, Madrid, Moscow, Ottawa, Paris, Seoul, Tel Aviv, Tokyo
and Washington.
Churches – more than 200 churches in Sweden and Mormon
Temples all over the world.
Museums – The Louvre, The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
The Victoria & Albert Museum,
Trondheim's Museum in Norway, The Nationalmuseum in Stockholm, Nordiska museet
in Stockholm, The Röhsska Museum of Design and Decorative Arts in Gothenburg
and many other Swedish museums.
By Appointment to his Majesty the King of Sweden
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Hästhagen, pile rug designed by
Märta Måås-Fjetterström in 1923.
A gift from Swedish women to
the Crown Princess Märtha of Norway,
for her wedding in 1929.
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