Winterthur Museum Collection Search Guide
Contents
- Search Overview
- Keyword Search
- Keep Searches Simple
- Date Searching
- Advanced Search
- Available Fields
- Tips for Advanced Search
- Searching Dates and Date Ranges
- Searching by Object Number
- Place of Origin Searches
- Multi-value Fields
- Combining Keyword and Advanced Search
- Search Results and Facets
- Contact Information
For Terms of Use and general information, see Online Museum Collection Information.
Search Overview
The Winterthur Museum Collection database uses a full-text search engine to match your terms against a broad range of catalogue fields, including object name, title, creator, materials, technique, subject, inscriptions, place of origin, and description. Use the Keyword Search for quick, broad queries, or open Advanced Search for more targeted results using specific fields.
A few things to know before you start:
- Searches are not case sensitive. Quilt, QUILT, and quilt return identical results.
- The default behavior for multi-word searches is to return records containing any of the words. If any results match the exact multi-word search, they will be boosted in the results ranking above all other results.
- Common punctuation is ignored. Characters such as commas, semicolons, parentheses, hyphens, and most symbols are treated as spaces. coffee-pot and coffeepot may not return identical results — see the Spelling note below.
- Spelling matters. Unlike some search engines, this system does not auto-correct spelling. If a search returns no results, try an alternative spelling. Example: searching coffeepot returns different results than coffee pot.
- Each object belongs to a single Category. If you do not find what you are looking for under one category, try another that might apply. The exceptions now are Estate Objects and Garden Objects.
- Use the “With Images Only” option to limit results to records containing images.
- “On Display Only” limits results to objects presently on display.
Keyword Search
Use the main search box to search across all indexed fields at once.
Keep Searches Simple
Keep terms simple. A multi-word search looks for records that contain any of those words across the searchable fields — it does not require all words to appear in the same field. However, combining too many unrelated concepts in one search (for example, plate England creamware) may not always return relevant results, because plate is an object name, England is a place of origin, and creamware is a material — each stored in a separate field. A more effective approach is to enter the most distinctive term in the keyword box and use Advanced Search to specify the other criteria.
Date Searching
Date searches belong in Advanced Search. Do not include years or date ranges in the keyword box; use the Earliest Year and Latest Year fields under Advanced Search instead.
Fields Searchable Through Keyword Search:
- Description
- Subject
- Object Name / Title
- Creator
- Materials
- Techniques
- Place of Origin
- Inscription fields
- Credit Line
- Object Number
Advanced Search
Click Advanced Search to filter results using specific catalogue fields. All fields you fill in are combined, so results must satisfy every criterion you enter.
Available Fields
| Field | What it searches | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Object Name | The object's primary name or type | Enter the singular form. Example: quilt rather than quilts. |
| Object Number | The museum accession number | Partial numbers supported. Advanced searches in this field provide more accurate results for Object Number than a Keyword search. |
| Creator | Maker, artist, or manufacturer name | Partial name matches are supported. |
| Material | Materials the object is made from | Semicolons separate multiple materials; results match any by default. |
| Technique | Construction or decorative techniques | Searches across multiple technique fields simultaneously. |
| Inscription | Marks, signatures, or inscribed text on the object | |
| Subject | Depicted subjects or themes | |
| Place of Origin | Geographic origin of the object | Searches across continent, country, region, state/province, city, and notes fields simultaneously. A single term will match any of these levels. Example: entering Massachusetts returns objects from anywhere in Massachusetts. |
| Credit Line / Donor | Donor name or acquisition credit line | Search the last name of the donor. If the donor is anonymous or their name is not included in the credit line, there will not be a match. |
| Earliest Year | Lower bound of a date-range search | Enter a four-digit year. Matches objects whose recorded date range overlaps with the year entered. |
| Latest Year | Upper bound of a date-range search | Enter a four-digit year. Use together with Earliest Year to define a range. |
| Category | Broad object category (e.g., Ceramics, Furniture) | Select from a list. |
| Only records with images | Limits results to objects that have at least one image | |
| Currently on display | Limits results to objects currently on display |
Tips for Advanced Search
Searching Dates and Date Ranges
Searching for dates and date ranges. Enter a four-digit year in Earliest Year, Latest Year, or both. To find objects from a specific decade, enter the decade’s start in Earliest Year and its end in Latest Year (for example, 1850 to 1859). The search uses a permissive overlap — an object dated 1840–1860 will appear in a search for that decade.
Searching by Object Number
Searching by object number. Use this format with leading placeholder zeros where relevant:
####.####.###
Examples:
- 1953.0178.002
- 1963.0700
Object numbers are composed of two or more segments: XXXX.XXXX (Year-Object Number) OR XXXX.XXXX.XXX (Year-Accession Number-Object Number). Enter as much of the information you know.
Multi-part Objects: Objects with multiple components may include letter suffixes:
- 1953.0178.002 A
- 1953.0178.002 B
Enter a space between the last number and the letter. Searching without the suffix returns all related parts. If you are looking for all objects in a given acquisition, enter just the first two number segments (for example, 1963.0700).
Place of Origin Searches
Place of Origin searches a single field. The Place of Origin field simultaneously searches city, state/province, country, region, and continent. You do not need to know in which level a place name is stored. However, if you enter multiple place words (for example, Boston Massachusetts), the search will look for records where those words appear somewhere across all place fields — a simple, single place name (example: Boston) is usually more reliable.
Multi-value Fields
Multi-value fields (Material, Technique). When you enter multiple comma-separated values, results will include objects matching any of those values by default.
Combining Keyword and Advanced Search
Combining Keyword and Advanced Search. You can fill in both the keyword box and Advanced Search fields at the same time. This is a good way to narrow large result sets. The keyword field searches across description and other fields not exposed as individual Advanced Search filters, so it can pick up detail that targeted field searches would miss. Example: to find Winterthur’s ceramic plates decorated with a Boston State House pattern, enter Boston State House in the keyword box, enter plate in the Object Name field, and select Ceramics from the Category list.
Search Results and Facets
The sidebar of the search results page shows facets — counts of categories like Materials and Techniques represented within the current result set. Clicking a facet value filters results to that value; selecting multiple facet values within the same category returns objects with all of the selected values. You can also choose to include or exclude certain facet values from your results set by checking the boxes labeled under “Include” or “Exclude”.
Contact Information
For assistance with the collection database:
- General inquiries: Museum Collection — MuseumCollection@Winterthur.org
- Image requests: this form
- Technical support: Submit your issue