The dishwasher has robbed the good old kitchen towel of some of its practical significance. Nevertheless, it remains present in many households, hand-woven or industrially produced, lint-free or absorbent, dirty or clean, inherited or replaceable. In some kitchens, special attention is also required, as there is one for the hands and one for the dishes. For a long time, specially made kitchen towels were a luxury and reserved for the upper classes. Industrial mass production has changed this, and today two developments can be observed: while kitchen towels are displayed as design objects in museum stores and craft stores, they are also standardised cheap goods. In The Tea Towel: Perspectives on an Everyday Item, 13 authors, artists, and designers enter into a dialogue with the object and examine it from a literary, journalistic, artistic, technical, and socio-political perspective. The contributions of very different tones complement each other and create new references. In text and images, the book encourages a rediscovery of the everyday kitchen towel as a sensual object with which many socially relevant topics are associated. AUTHORS: Vera Roggli is a textile designer living and working between Italy, Switzerland, and Belgium. Eva Wolf is a graphic designer and illustrator, and Basil Linder is a graphic designer and typeface designer. They jointly run the Bern-based design firm Studio Eva Basil. SELLING POINTS: . Everyone associates something with the tea towel: memories, experiences, anecdotes, likes and dislikes . This illustrated reader explores the kitchen towel from literary, journalistic, artistic, technical, and sociopolitical perspectives . The contributions from very different voices complement each other and bring to light new references to current topics 90 colour illustrations