Watts & Co's New 'Sainte-Chapelle' Inspired Line of Vestments


Anyone who has followed the history and tenure of Watts & Co. of London will know that they are known for two things in particular: their passion for bold, medievally inspired designs and medievally inspired vestments generally. They are, of course, experienced at others things as well, but this is what most characterized the past and contemporary work of Watts and most recently they've continued on with this tradition, launching an entirely new range of vestments that they've coined their "Sainte-Chapelle" line, inspired by that gem of medieval Parisian architecture, Sainte-Chapelle. 

Watts provides a detailed exposition of their new line, which was launched in April 2026, in a detailed article on their blog, Light Made Manifest: A New Vestment Range Inspired by Sainte-Chapelle:

This spring, we are delighted to present a new range of vestments that translates the visual language of medieval sacred architecture into woven form. Drawing inspiration from the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris, this collection brings together beauty, tradition, and devotion.

For Watts and Co, this connection with Sainte-Chapelle runs deeper than mere aesthetic admiration. Notably, one of our founders, Sir George Gilbert Scott, stood among the first English architects to study the Sainte-Chapelle in detail, returning from his architectural tour of France with what he described as 'a wholly new set of ideas.' It is in Gilbert Scott's diaries that he records his detailed study of the Sainte-Chapelle. Sainte-Chapelle, specifically, was a key inspiration for Gilbert Scott, with the design of the chapel being lifted and repatriated with English sensibilities in St John's College, Cambridge and Exeter College, Oxford. This range continues that inheritance, bringing together our liturgical design heritage with the Gothic architecture that so profoundly shaped his vision.

These architectural forms that Sir Gilbert Scott studied so intently—details that shaped and crowned his approach to the Gothic Revival—are central to the advice he imparted to his students at the Royal Academy: 'When you go abroad, begin with France, it is the great centre of Medieval art.' We have taken that advice to heart, beginning with the Sainte-Chapelle that he first examined with practical intention.

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Our luxurious damask marries two distinctive motifs: the sinuous ogee arch, a characteristic of Rayonnant Gothic, and the fleur-de-lys of the monarchs of France, uniting the guiding principles of Gilbert Scott's design ethos. The ogee—that pointed, curved form found in vaulting and window frames—flows continuously across the surface, creating a rhythm that echoes the vertical aspiration of medieval churches. Woven into this geometry, the alternating fleur-de-lys and cross speak of earthly sovereignty, Marian purity, and the meaning of what it is to be Christian. Here, this repetitive pattern is a reminder of the dual citizenship that sacred dress signifies: service here, calling above.

The orphrey presents the collection's most striking feature, interpreting the stained glass that makes Sainte-Chapelle so recognisable in textile form. Within Gothic ogee frames, crosses and fleurs-de-lys alternate in vertical procession, contained by black line details that recall the lead cames holding the jewel-like fragments in place. The effect traces the journey of light itself—how it enters, fractures, and transforms—captured here in woven threads rather than coloured glass. Gold outlines illuminate each motif against grounds of deep red and green, creating that distinctive medieval luminosity where darkness and radiance achieve perfect balance. This orphrey aspires to a level of completeness present in the Sainte-Chapelle, where every line serves both beauty and meaning.

Perhaps the most intimate detail of our new collection is the element of the design that is least seen. The lining, woven in deep celestial blue and scattered with gold stars, offers a glimpse of the heavens with every movement. When the celebrant raises their arms or turns at the altar, the vestment shifts to reveal this private sky—an architectural secret shared only with the congregation in fleeting moments. This star-scattered blue recalls the painted vaults of Gothic chapels, where the ceiling becomes a cosmic diagram and the worshipper stands at the intersection of earth and heaven. It was this quality of transcendence that drew Sir Gilbert Scott to the Sainte-Chapelle, that made him recommend France as the essential starting point for any student of medieval art. He recognised, as we do, that the Sainte-Chapelle was conceived as a monumental piece of goldsmith's art—a reliquary in architectural form where matter and spirit achieve perfect equilibrium.

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These vestments acknowledge that sacred dress operates simultaneously on multiple registers: historical, aesthetic, theological, functional. The ogee arches, the fleur-de-lys, the star-scattered lining—these are not mere quotations of medieval forms but participations in them, ways of allowing an 800-year-old visual vocabulary to continue speaking in contemporary worship. But despite the considered creativity at play in our new collection, we view ourselves as merely inheriting an ethos handed down through Watts & Co from Gilbert Scott: we inherit that belief in the living power of Gothic form to inspire devotion and elevate the spirit.

Our hope is that this collection might participate in the ancient transfiguration that Gothic architecture understood so well—where matter becomes spirit, where fabric becomes architecture in motion, and where the wearer becomes, however briefly, a living conduit for light. The Sainte-Chapelle survived revolution and neglect to remain a threshold space where the material and immaterial negotiate their ancient alliance. Our range aspires to similar functionality, continuing the exchange of ideas and shared values that connected two giants of the Gothic Revival across the Channel, uniting our company's founding heritage with the enduring beauty of medieval sacred art.

Here then is a selection of photos showing the new line in some of its various iterations.





Watts' new line also includes dalmatics/tunicles, copes and humeral veils, thus allowing one the option of a complete Solemn Mass set if desired. Here is just one of the copes and one of the dalmatics:




For more information, please visit Watts & Co's website, or you may also find them on social media.

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