Observations are presented of two large 'filamentary' H1 emission features which appeared, by chance, in an aperture synthesis survey of 21-cm emission towards NGC 7538. One feature, with velocity near 0 km s-1 (LSR), is part of the large, roughly spherical expanding shell of gas related to the Cep OB3 association. The new results show the shell to be less than 0.5 pc thick in places, much thinner than has been previously assumed. The feature is consistent with a type II supernova remnant as suggested by Assousa, Herbst & Turner, with an age ∼4.3 × 105 yr and an initial energy ∼1.2 × 1051 erg, but could also represent a 'bubble' produced by stellar winds from the stars in Cep OB3.The other feature has a velocity of about - 35 km s-1, and also appears to be an expanding spherical shell. This object is more distant (2.6-3kpc) and larger in extent than the Cep OB3 shell. It contains ∼104Mo of hydrogen expanding at ∼15 km s-1, and may be an old (t ∼1.6 × 106 yr) supernova remnant. A stellar wind origin is also plausible energetically, but no correlation is observed between the shell and any known OB association. © 1980 Royal Astronomical Society. Provided by the NASA Astrophysics Data System.