Ethel Mary Coomaraswamy, nee Partridge, later Mrs. Mairet (1872-1952), was a British author, photographer and weaver. Born in Devon, she became an Associate of the Royal College of Music and worked as a governess before marrying Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy, an Indian metaphysician, historian and philosopher of Indian art, in 1902. She travelled with him to Ceylon, and while there, the couple collaborated on Mediaeval Sinhalese Art, Coomaraswamy wrote the text and Ethel provided the photographs. It was a groundbreaking study of Sri Lankan craft and culture. The spirit presiding over much of the early activity of Ananda and Ethel was William Morris, the English craftsman and author, who initiated the handcraft revival in the later 19th century as a response to mass-produced industrial manufacture. Partridge and Coomaraswamy divorced after a few years and she returned to England, where she later married the writer Philip Mairet and, as Ethel Mariet, became well known as a weaver and advocate of hand craft. Her works include: A Book on Vegetable Dyes (1916), Vegetable Dyes (1924), Hand-Weaving Today: Traditions and Changes (1939), Hand-Weaving and Education (1940) and Hand-Weaving Notes for Teachers (1948). Это и многое другое вы найдете в книге Vegetable Dyes (Dodo Press) (Ethel M. Mairet)