Museum Het Leids Wevershuis
About Museum Het Leids Wevershuis
Museum Het Leids Wevershuis comprises of one of the final "weavers' homes" in Leiden, Netherlands. The outside, the extensive old fashioned linger and the inside, are declaration of the once thriving material industry around Leiden, specifically amid the sixteenth and seventeenth century, when numerous home weavers provided the draper's organization with astounding woolen fabric. In the 1970s it pulled in the consideration of a little gathering of nearby history specialists and they framed Het Kleine Leidse Woonhuis in 1976 to spare little old structures in Leiden, for example, this one.
The building was solidified as a house in a neck-peak style around 1900. The generally unblemished inside reflects living plans for specialists in the mid twentieth century in Leiden. A unique basement exists under the house and parts of the inside go back to the seventeenth century. The building and its antique inside are the exhibition hall. There is a little accumulation of present day hand-woven materials. The gallery has a weaver accessible most days to exhibit the specialty on a vast linger. Items made amid shows are available to be purchased. The exhibition hall is a short strolling separation from the old Draper's society, some portion of Museum De Lakenhal today.