Behind the Seams: Clothing and Textiles on Nantucket
On view at the Nantucket Whaling Museum (Nantucket Historical Association) from May 23 to November 2, 2025
Guest Curator, Costume and Textile Mounting: Jennifer Nieling, JLN Costume Mounting LLC
Exhibition Designers : Helen Riegle, HER Design; R. Kurt Weidman
Organized by the Nantucket Historical Association, the exhibition Behind the Seams: Clothing and Textiles on Nantucket presents more than 150 objects from the NHA’s costume and textile collections to tell stories of making, meaning, and island identity from across Nantucket history.
Behind the Seams is the first major exhibition of objects from the NHA’s costume and textile collection since completion in 2018 of a major inventory funded by the Institute for Museum and Library Services. Carried out across eighteen months, this cataloging and rehousing project ensured the long-term preservation of the textile collection while increasing access and visibility for research and display. Plans for an exhibition based on the new insights revealed by the inventory are now being realized in Behind the Seams. The guest curator for the exhibition is Jennifer Nieling, an independent costume and textile specialist whose association with the NHA goes back to 2015 when she inventoried the menswear collection and mounted the first of many costumes for NHA exhibition projects. In 2017 and 2018, she led the IMLS-funded collection inventory.
Image credits: Bill Hoenk for NHA
Behind the Seams: Introduction

Making: Sewing and Handcraft
Meaning: Life Events, Community & Identity

20th Century Making & Meaning: Made on Nantucket TM Garments displayed on custom invisible fosshape mounts made by JLN Costume Mounting

20th Century Making & Meaning: Craft Revivals Featuring clothing and textiles from Nantucket Looms and the Cloth Company of Nantucket
Exhibition themes explore textile production and trade—from raw materials to finished garments—as well as the relationships, communities, identities, and values revealed by textile objects created and used by Nantucketers.
Making: From raw materials to finished products, textile goods were both imported and created on the island by Nantucketers—reflecting regional and international connections as well as local industry and craftsmanship.
Meaning: Clothing and textiles can be symbols of group identity, expressions of values, and can commemorate life events, community, and connections to the past.
Craft revivals & Nantucket brands: The influence and impact of the island’s robust craft revival movement and summer resort-inspired clothing brands extend the themes of making and meaning into the twentieth century.
Sustainable practices: Evidence of strategic construction and alteration, mending and fabric reuse, demonstrate how islanders historically cared for and valued clothing and textiles. Today, island makers incorporate sustainable textile practices by upcycling materials and reducing waste.
The Making and Meanings of Behind the Seams with Guest Curator Jennifer Nieling, May 29, 2025
Meaning: Community & Identity, Quaker Dress

Celebrating Island History & the Nantucket Fetes
Meaning: Community & Identity

Making: Materials
Making: Sewing & Handcraft

Making: Global Trade & Local Commerce; Nantucket via Paris

Sustainable Practices from the 20th century to today

20th Century Making & Meaning: Craft Revivals Prints by Leslie & D. D. Tillett for the Cloth Company of Nantucket

20th century Making & Meaning: Craft Revivals

Making: Sewing Education

Making: Quilting & Sustainability

Making: Sewing & Handcraft

Nantucket via Paris
Nantucket via Paris

Meaning: Life events

Upcycled and sustainable textiles by contemporary Nantucket makers: Cara DeHeart

Upcycled and sustainable textiles by contemporary Nantucket makers: Angel Evering/2 Hearts Creations; Karin Sheppard/Island Weaves