Coming from the East, the oldest quilts were brought back in the eleventh and twelfth centuries by the crusaders who found them particularly suitable to protect themselves from the cold and from the contact of their armors. In Europe, Naples and Sicily were the first important manufacturing centers for these luxurious products.
Marseille, whose port was turned towards trade with the Levant and Italy, was a gateway for these fabrics. King René (1409-1480), who administered both the kingdom of Naples and the county of Provence, encouraged the transmission of this transalpine art called Trapunto.
As early as the 14th century, Italian embroiderers settled in Marseille and set up small workshops at home. Phocaean productions were a flourishing success and spread throughout the kingdom. In the 17th century, five to six thousand professional embroiderers making every year between 40,000 and 50,000 pieces of raised white-work or embroidery (petticoats, coverlets, chauffoirs, layette pieces). Although other production centers exist, the pre-eminence of Provence is undeniable.