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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26120-8.txt b/26120-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4d99897 --- /dev/null +++ b/26120-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6125 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Chats on Old Lace and Needlework, by Emily +Leigh Lowes + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Chats on Old Lace and Needlework + + +Author: Emily Leigh Lowes + + + +Release Date: July 24, 2008 [eBook #26120] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK*** + + +E-text prepared by Susan Skinner and the Project Gutenberg Online +Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 26120-h.htm or 26120-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/1/2/26120/26120-h/26120-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/1/2/26120/26120-h.zip) + + + + + +CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK + +by + +MRS. LOWES + + * * * * * + +BOOKS FOR COLLECTORS + + +_With Frontispieces and many Illustrations Large Crown 8vo, cloth._ + +CHATS ON ENGLISH CHINA. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON OLD FURNITURE. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON OLD PRINTS. + (How to collect and value Old Engravings.) + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON COSTUME. + By G. Woolliscroft Rhead. + +CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK. + By E. L. Lowes. + +CHATS ON ORIENTAL CHINA. + By J. F. Blacker. + +CHATS ON OLD MINIATURES. + By J. J. Foster, F.S.A. + +CHATS ON ENGLISH EARTHENWARE. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON AUTOGRAPHS. + By A. M. Broadley. + +CHATS ON PEWTER. + By H. J. L. J. Massé, M.A. + +CHATS ON POSTAGE STAMPS. + By Fred. J. Melville. + +CHATS ON OLD JEWELLERY AND TRINKETS. + By MacIver Percival. + +CHATS ON COTTAGE AND FARMHOUSE FURNITURE. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON OLD COINS. + By Fred. W. Burgess + +CHATS ON OLD COPPER AND BRASS. + By Fred. W. Burgess. + +CHATS ON HOUSEHOLD CURIOS. + By Fred. W. Burgess. + +CHATS ON OLD SILVER. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON JAPANESE PRINTS. + By Arthur Davison Ficke. + +CHATS ON MILITARY CURIOS. + By Stanley C. Johnson. + +CHATS ON OLD CLOCKS AND WATCHES. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON ROYAL COPENHAGEN PORCELAIN. + By Arthur Hayden. + +LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN, LTD. +NEW YORK: F. A. STOKES COMPANY + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke.] + + +MARY SIDNEY, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE. + +Born about 1555. Died 1621. +Buried at Salisbury Cathedral. +Painted probably by MARC GHEERAEDTS. + + "Underneath this sable hearse + Lies the subject of all verse. + Sidney's sister, Pembroke's mother. + Death! ere thou hast slain another + Fair and learn'd and good as she, + Time shall throw a dart at thee!" + + +CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK + +by + +MRS. LOWES + +With 76 Illustrations + + + + + + + +London +T. Fisher Unwin, Ltd. +Adelphi Terrace + +First Impression 1908 +Second Impression 1912 +Third Impression 1919 + +[All rights reserved.] + + + + +PREFACE + + +This little book has been compiled to emphasise and accentuate the +distinct awakening of English women and Needlecraft Artists to the +beauty of the ancient laces and embroideries which we own in the +magnificent historic collections in our great public Museums. + +We are fortunate in possessing in the Victoria and Albert Museum +monumental specimens of both lace and needlework. Among the sumptuous +lace collection there are most perfect specimens of the art of +lace-making, and priceless pieces of historic embroidery made when +England was first and foremost in the world in the production of +Ecclesiastical embroidery. + +The lace collection particularly, without compare, is illustrative of +all that is best in this delightful art, being specially rich in +magnificent pieces that can never be again obtained. These have mostly +been given, or left as legacies, to the Museum by collectors and +enthusiasts who have made this fascinating hobby the quest of their +lives. In addition to the collection formed by the generosity of the +donors, the authorities have exercised a very catholic judgment in +selecting the choicest and most illustrative examples of the +lace-maker's craft. + +In the section devoted to embroideries, more particularly English (as it +is with our own country's needlework I propose to deal), nothing more +glorious in the Nation's art records can be found than the masterpieces +of embroidery worked by the great ladies, the abbesses and nuns of the +Mediæval period. In almost every other branch of art England has been +equalled, if not excelled, by Continental craftsmen; but in this one +instance, up to the Reformation, English work was sought after far and +wide, and as _opus Anglicum_ formed part of church furnishing and +priestly vestments in every great cathedral in Italy, Spain, and France. + +It cannot be too soon realised that, as with old furniture, porcelain, +and silver, much of the finest embroideries of England, and a vast +quantity of the ancient laces of Italy, France, and Belgium are being +slowly but surely carried off to the New World. American dollars are +doing much to rob not only the Old Country of the fairest flowers of her +garden, but the Continent of their finest and best examples of the +genius of the past. The Vanderbilts and the Astors, among others, +possess immense fortunes in lace, whilst that omnivorous collector Mr. +J. Pierpont Morgan gives fabulous sums for any fine old relic of +embroidery. Many pieces of both classes of needlecraft have found a +permanent home in the Metropolitan Museum of New York, and are lost for +ever to the English student. + +It is, therefore, a pleasant duty to add my little quota of information +to the study of these fascinating and exquisite branches of fine art +which so specially appeal to all women by their dainty grace and +delightful handicraft. I hope I may arouse some little enthusiasm in my +countrywomen in the study of the past glories of both subjects, and in +the possibility of once again becoming first and foremost in the latter +branch. + +I beg to acknowledge the pleasure and help I have received from the +perusal of the late Mrs. Bury Palliser's exhaustive "History of Lace," +and Lady Alford's "History of Needlework," and Dr. Rock's invaluable +books on "Ecclesiastical Embroidery." + +EMILY LEIGH LOWES. + +HILLCREST, +BRIXTON HILL, +S.W. + + + + +BIBLIOGRAPHY + + +LACE. + + The History of Lace. 1 vol. Mrs. Bury Palliser. Sampson, + Marston & Low. 1865. £2 2s. + + Dentelles and Guipures. 1 vol. E. Lefebure. Grevil. 1888. + + Ancient Needlepoint and Pillow Lace. Alan Sumnerly Cole. + London. 1873. + + The Queen Lace Book. London. 1874. + + Of Lace. Alan Sumnerly Cole. 1893. + + Point and Pillow Lace. A. M. Sharp. George Newnes & Co. 7s. 6d. + + Venice and Burano. Ancient and Modern Lace. M. Jesuram. Venice. + 1883. + + The History of Handmade Lace. Mrs. Jackson. Upcott Gill & Son. + 1900. 18s. + + Seven Centuries of Lace. Mrs. Hungerford-Pollen. 1st vol. + issued 1908. + + +NEEDLEWORK. + + Textile Fabrics. Dr. Daniel Rock. South Kensington Handbook + Series. 1876. 1s. + + Needlework as Art. Lady Marion Alford. London. 1886. £4 4s. + + English Embroidery. A.F. Kendrick. George Newnes & Co. 7s. 6d. + + Art in Needlework. Day & Buckle. Batsford. 7s. 6d. + + + + +CONTENTS + + + PAGE + +PREFACE 7 + +BIBLIOGRAPHY 10 + + +OLD LACE + +CHAPTER + + I. A BRIEF HISTORY OF LACE 21 + + II. THE ART OF LACE-MAKING 33 + + III. THE LACES OF ITALY 45 + + IV. THE LACES OF GENOA AND MILAN 57 + + V. THE LACES OF FRANCE: NEEDLEPOINT 69 + + VI. THE LACES OF FRANCE: PILLOW 85 + + VII. THE LACES OF FLANDERS 99 + +VIII. MODERN BRUSSELS AND MECHLIN 119 + + IX. OTHER CONTINENTAL LACES 131 + + X. A SHORT HISTORY OF LACE IN ENGLAND 139 + + XI. ENGLISH LACES 155 + + XII. SCOTCH AND IRISH LACE 169 + +XIII. HOW TO IDENTIFY LACE 179 + + XIV. SALE PRICES 199 + + +NEEDLEWORK + +CHAPTER PAGE + + I. OLD ENGLISH EMBROIDERY 205 + + II. THE GREAT PERIOD 217 + + III. ECCLESIASTICAL EMBROIDERIES AND VESTMENTS 229 + + IV. TUDOR EMBROIDERIES 245 + + V. EARLY NEEDLEWORK PICTURES AND ACCESSORIES 253 + + VI. STUART CASKETS AND MIRROR 267 + + VII. EMBROIDERED BOOKS AND "BLACK WORK" 275 + +VIII. STUART PICTURES 289 + + IX. SAMPLERS 305 + + X. THE WILLIAM AND MARY EMBROIDERIES 317 + + XI. PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 331 + + XII. NEEDLEWORK PICTURES OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 347 + +XIII. EMBROIDERY IN COSTUME 355 + + XIV. SALE PRICES 365 + + XV. CONCLUSION 373 + + +INDEX--OLD LACE 381 + + NEEDLEWORK 384 + + + + +LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS + + +MARY SIDNEY, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE _Frontispiece_ + + +OLD LACE PAGE + +EGYPTIAN CUT AND DRAWN WORK 20 + +OLD ITALIAN "CUTWORKE" 20 + +EARLY ENGLISH SAMPLERS 23 + +ORIGINAL PATTERNS BY VINCIOLA 27 + +ORIGINAL DESIGNS OF RETICELLA EDGINGS BY VINCIOLA 31 + +CHART OF NEEDLEPOINT RÉSEAUX 36 + +CHART OF PILLOW RÉSEAUX 39 + +VENETIAN ROSE POINT 43 + +VENETIAN ROSE POINT COLLAR 48 + +EXAMPLES OF FLAT VENETIAN POINT 51 + +MARIE DE MEDICIS WEARING VENETIAN POINT COLLAR 52 + +EXAMPLE OF GROS POINT DE VENICE 55 + +LOUIS XIII. WEARING GENOESE COLLAR LACE 60 + +GENOESE COLLAR LACE 63 + +MILANESE LACE 67 + +OLD ITALIAN AND FRENCH LACES AND CUT AND DRAWN WORK 72 + +"POINT DE FRANCE" 75 + +POINT D'ALENÇON 76 + +"POINT DE FRANCE" AND D'ARGENTELLA 79 + +POINT D'ARGENTAN AND POINT D'ARGENTELLA 83 + +VALENCIENNES 88 + +"LILLE" 91 + +EMPRESS EUGENIE WEARING BLONDE LACE 95 + +POINT D'ANGLETERRE 102 + +POINT D'ANGLETERRE LAPPET 105 + +BRUSSELS LACE 109 + +BRUSSELS LAPPET 113 + +COMTESSE D'ARTOIS WEARING BRUSSELS LACE 117 + +MARIE ANTOINETTE 122 + +MECHLIN LAPPET 125 + +MARIE ANTOINETTE WEARING MECHLIN LACE 129 + +"DUCHESSE" LACE 135 + +QUEEN ELIZABETH WEARING VENETIAN POINT RUFF AND CUFFS 141 + +EDMUND SPENSER: COLLAR TRIMMED WITH RETICELLA 145 + +RETICELLA FALLING COLLAR 149 + +COLLAR OF GROS POINT 153 + +OLD BUCKINGHAM AND EARLY DEVONSHIRE LACES 159 + +OLD HONITON LACE 163 + +MODERN HONITON LACE 167 + +LIMERICK "FILLINGS" 173 + +CARRICK-MA-CROSS LACE 177 + +RETICELLA WITH GENOA BORDERS 182 + +POINT D'ANGLETERRE 185 + +ITALIAN ECCLESIASTICAL LACE 189 + +BRUSSELS LAPPET 193 + +"POINT DE GAZE" 197 + + +NEEDLEWORK + +EGYPTIAN EMBROIDERY 208 + +BAYEUX TAPESTRY 211 + +KING HAROLD FROM BAYEUX TAPESTRY 215 + +FRAGMENT FROM THE "JESSE" COPE 221 + +THE "SYON" COPE 225 + +THE STEEPLE ASTON ALTAR FRONTAL 232 + +THE "NEVIL" ALTAR FRONTAL 235 + +DIAGRAM SHOWING USE OF VESTMENTS 239 + +SET OF ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS 243 + +EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE 256 + +EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE 259 + +STUART GLOVE 263 + +STUART MIRROR FRAME 271 + +STUART BOOK COVER 278 + +QUEEN ELIZABETH'S POCKET-BOOK 281 + +"BLACK WORK" CAP 285 + +EMBROIDERY PORTRAIT OF KING CHARLES I. 293 + +STUMP-WORK PICTURE 297 + +"PETIT POINT" PICTURE WORKED ON SATIN 301 + +A SEVENTEENTH CENTURY "SAMPLER" 309 + +EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER" 313 + +JACOBEAN HANGINGS 319 + +ENLARGEMENT OF SPRAY FROM HANGINGS 323 + +QUEEN ANNE PICTURE 327 + +EARLY GEORGIAN PICTURE 334 + +"THE LAST SUPPER" 337 + +EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SILK EMBROIDERED PICTURE 341 + +BLACK SILK AND HAIR PICTURE 345 + +A "GAINSBOROUGH" PICTURE 361 + + + + +I + +A BRIEF HISTORY OF LACE + + +[Illustration: EGYPTIAN CUT AND DRAWN WORK. + +Found in a tomb in Thebes.] + +[Illustration: OLD ITALIAN "CUTWORKE." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +CHATS ON OLD LACE + + + + +I + +A BRIEF HISTORY OF LACE + + Early vestiges in Egypt--Lace found in St. Cuthbert's Tomb (685 + A.D.)--Drawn Thread and Cutworks--Venetian Lace--Flanders + Lace--French Laces--English Lace. + + +In every other art or craft we can search the history of ages and find +some vestiges or beginnings among the earlier civilisations. Possibly +owing to the exquisite fragility of Lace, there is a complete absence of +data earlier than that of Egypt. The astonishing perfection in art +handicrafts of all descriptions which we find in China many hundreds of +years before the Christian era shows no vestiges of a manufacture of +lace; but, in the tombs of ancient Egypt, garments have been discovered +with the edges frayed and twisted into what we may call a primitive +lace, and in some of the Coptic embroideries threads have been drawn out +at intervals and replaced with those of coloured wools, making an +uncouth but striking design. Netting must have been understood, as many +of the mummies found at Thebes and elsewhere are discovered wearing a +net to hold or bind the hair; and also, a fine network, interspersed +with beads, is often discovered laid over the breast, sometimes having +delightful little blue porcelain deities strung amongst their meshes. + +These early vestiges, however, are in no way representative of the later +exquisite fabrics which we now know and recognise as Lace. Far nearer to +them, as an art, are the early gold and silver laces of simple design +found amongst the tombs of Mycenæ and Etruria, and those of a later +date--_i.e._, the laces of gold used to decorate the vestments of the +clergy, and the simple but sumptuous gowns of the Middle Ages. Along +with the stole and maniple of St. Cuthbert, which are now at Durham +Cathedral, was found a piece of detached gold lace, which must have +formed a separate trimming. St. Cuthbert died in 685 A.D., and was +buried at Lindisfarne, his body being afterwards transferred to Durham +to save it from the desecration of the Danes who were ravaging the land. +Over the body was a cloth, or sheet, which was worked in cutworks and +fringes, showing that even at so early a date initial efforts at +lace-making had been attempted. + +[Illustration: EARLY ENGLISH SAMPLERS, SHOWING CUT AND DRAWN WORK. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +As far as we can gather, the earliest endeavour at lace-making +originated with the drawing of threads in linen fabrics, then dividing +the existing threads into strands, and working over them, in various +fanciful designs, either with a buttonhole stitch or simply a wrapping +stitch. Exactly this method is used at the present day, and is known +as hem-stitching and fine-drawing. A later development suggested, +apparently, cutting away of some of the threads, their place being +supplied with others placed angularly or in circles. Many delightful +examples of the work are to be seen in our Old English samplers of the +sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and even so recently as thirty +years ago specimens of this primitive and early lace-making were to be +seen in the quaint "smock-frock" of the English farm labourer, a garment +which, though discarded by the wearer in favour of the shoddy products +of the Wakefield looms, is now deemed worthy of a place in the +collector's museum. + +It required little effort of fancy and skill, by the simple process of +evolution and survival of the fittest, to expand this plan of cutting +away threads and replacing them with others to doing away _entirely_ +with existing and attached threads, and supplying the whole with a +pattern of threads laid down on some geometric fashion on a backing of +parchment, _working over_ and _connecting_ the patterns together, and +afterwards liberating the entire work from the parchment, thereby making +what was known at the time as "punto in aria," or working with the +needle-point in the air, literally "_out of nothing_." + +Strange as this may appear, this was the origin, in the fifteenth +century, of the whole wonderful fabric which afterwards became known as +"Point lace," which altered and even revolutionised dress, made life +itself beautiful, and supplied the women of Europe with a livelihood +gained in an easy, artistic, and delightful manner. It also, however, +led to ruinous expenditure in every country, at times requiring special +edicts to restrain its extravagance, and even the revival of the old +Sumptuary laws to repress it. + +The earliest known lace, and by far the most popular with all classes, +was "Reticella," which was the first kind evolved on the "punto in aria" +principle. Until the discovery of an easy and simple way of decorating +the linen ruffs and cuffs of the period these had been quite plain, as +many contemporary portraits show. Afterwards the fashion of trimming +garments of all descriptions with the pointed wiry edges of Venice +became a mania, and led to imitation in almost every country of Europe. +The convents turned out an immense quantity, thereby adding enormously +to the incomes of their establishments. It is assumed that it is to the +nuns of Italy we owe the succeeding elaboration of Reticella, +"Needlepoint," the long, placid hours spent in the quiet convent +gardens, lending themselves to the refinement and delicacy which this +exquisite fabric made necessary. However this may be, it is certain that +in a few years the rise and development of Needlepoint lace-making was +little short of phenomenal, and every convent was busy making it and +teaching their poorer lay sisters the art. Some of the wonderful Old +Point of this period is absolutely finer than the naked eye can see, a +powerful magnifying glass being necessary to discern how the marvellous +"toile" or "gimpe" is made. + +[Illustration: ORIGINAL PATTERNS DESIGNED BY VINCIOLA. + +Seventeenth Century.] + +A little later, but still contemporary with the introduction of Venetian +lace, a Pillow lace was being made in Flanders, the origin of which +is not as yet discovered. It is possible that the fine flax thread grown +and manufactured there may, at the time of weaving, have suggested a +looser and more ornamental material, but that remains a matter of +conjecture. There must, however, have been an interchange of examples, +as about this time Pillow-made lace appeared in Italy, and led to the +making of the Milanese and Genoese varieties, and Needlepoint motifs +appeared amongst the woven network of Flanders. + +Lace, under the name of "Lacis," had been known in France from the time +of Catherine de Medici, who patronised the manufacturers and used it +lavishly. About 1585 she induced Federico di Vinciolo, a lace-maker and +designer of Venice, to settle in France, and there the making of +Venetian lace was attempted. A mere slavish imitation of the Venetian +school resulted, and it was not until the age of the _Grande Monarque_, +Louis XIV., that French lace rivalled that of Venice. + +Colbert, the great French Minister, becoming alarmed at the enormous +sums spent on Italian lace, determined to put a check to its +importation; and, by forbidding its use, establishing lace schools near +Alençon, and bribing Italian workers to come over as organisers and +teachers, started the manufacture of lace on an extensive scale, the +beautiful fabrics known as Point d'Alençon, Point d'Argentan, and Point +d'Argentella being the result. It is frequently said that the last-named +lace came from Genoa or Milan, but most of the present-day authorities +agree that this is one of the many fairy tales with which the passing of +time has adorned the history of lace. + +The persecution of the Protestants when the Huguenots fled to England, +bringing with them their arts of silk-weaving and lace-making, led to +the introduction of English lace. Devonshire apparently received a +contingent of laceworkers quite distinct from those who settled in +Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire, and from the first stages showed far +finer methods and designs. With the exception of "Old Honiton," England +cannot boast of anything very fine, and even this is merely a +meaningless meandering of woven tape-like design for the greater part. +The lace of Buckinghamshire ranks, perhaps, lowest in the scale of lace +products, its only merit being its extreme durability. + +The laces of Ireland are of comparatively recent growth, and though in +many instances exquisitely fine, do not as yet show much originality. + +[Illustration: ORIGINAL PATTERNS DESIGNED BY VINCIOLA.] + + + + +II + +THE ART OF LACE-MAKING + + +[Illustration: NEEDLEPOINT RÉSEAUX. + +No. 1.--Brussels. +No. 2.--Alençon. +No. 3.--Argentan. +No. 4.--Argentella.] + + + + +II + +THE ART OF LACE-MAKING + + Needlepoint--Pillow Laces--Charts of various Réseaux--Technical + Terms. + + +Lace-making naturally falls into two classes--the Needlepoint and Pillow +varieties. In some laces, more especially of the Belgian class, there is +a _mixed_ lace, the "toile" or pattern, being worked with the needle, +and the ground, or "réseau," made round it on the pillow and _vice +versâ_. + +To the first-named class we must assign the Needlepoint laces of Italy +and the exquisite handmade laces of France. To the latter order belong +the early Macramé lace, called "Punto a Groppo"; the Genoese and +Milanese laces of Italy; Mechlin and Brussels of Belgium; Valenciennes, +Lille, and Chantilly of France; and the English laces of Honiton, +Buckinghamshire, and Bedfordshire. + +Pillow lace may be easily distinguished from Point lace, as in the +former the ground, or réseau, is made of plaited threads. That of Point +lace is composed of threads made by the use of the buttonhole stitch +only, or, in the case of Alençon point, the mesh is worked in a special +manner. The later laces, _i.e._, those made during the last hundred +years, have frequently a ground of machine lace, and thus, strictly +speaking, are not lace at all, but only embroideries or appliqués. The +machine-made ground can be distinguished by sense of touch alone. If we +take a piece of hand-made net between the finger and thumb and slightly +roll it, it will gather in a soft little roll, with the touch almost of +floss silk. The machine-made net is hard, stiff, and wiry, and remains +perceptibly so in this test. Also, the mesh of machine-made lace is as +regular as though made with a fine machine fret-saw, that of hand-made +lace being of varying sizes, and often following the pattern of the lace +design. + +The accompanying diagram illustrates the various grounds, and will +prove an infallible guide in distinguishing the points of difference +between Point and Pillow lace. + +Various special and technical terms are used in describing the method of +making lace. Without burdening the reader too much, a few special terms +must be explained. + +_Brides_ (literally "bridges").--These are the connections between the +various parts of a lace design, both in Needle-point and Bobbin lace. In +the former, they are made entirely of a strand or two of thread thrown +across, and then buttonholed over, sometimes with tiny loops on the +edges, and in Venetian lace often having minute stars worked upon them. + +[Illustration: PILLOW RÉSEAUX. + +No. 1.--Valenciennes. +No. 2.--Brussels. +No. 3.--Lille. +No. 4.--Mechlin.] + +_Beading._--A tiny looped edge used to finish woven or Pillow-made lace. + +_Bobbins._--One of the essential parts of a Pillow worker's outfit. +These are small, elongated bobbins made of ivory, bone, or wood, on +which is wound the lace-maker's thread. Sometimes they have been made +very ornamental with carving and other decorations, and frequently have +"gingles," or a bunch of coloured beads attached to one end. The terms +"Bobbin lace" and "Bone lace" are derived from these and are synonymous +with "Pillow lace." + +_Cordonnet._--In most _Point_ laces the design is outlined with a raised +_cord_ either worked over closely with buttonhole stitches, or made +separately and then stitched down. The Cordonnet is one of the +characteristic features of the raised Venetian points and the French +laces of Alençon or Argentan. + +_Couronnes._--These are decorations of the Cordonnet especially +noticeable in the raised Venetian laces, in which sometimes the lace is +raised and worked upon no less than four separate times. + +_Dentelé._--Lace designed in scallop-form, chiefly used for border +laces. + +_Fillings._--This word most easily explains the ordinary terms of +"modes" and "à jours." The inner parts of the pattern in Needlepoint and +Pillow lace are filled in with various ornamental stitches, showing an +amazing variety of design. By these fillings various laces may often be +distinguished, as each factory had its favourite "modes." + +_Grounds._--There are two varieties of grounds, one made with Brides, +and the other either with Needlepoint or Pillow network. Other names +for these are "Réseaux" and "Fonds." The method of making Needlepoint or +woven ground often decides the date and class of the lace. + +_Guipure._--Literally a _tape lace_. The name however is applied to all +Pillow laces having a tape-like design on them. + +_Picots._--The little loops used to ornament a plain bride or tie. + +[Illustration: VENETIAN ROSE POINT. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +III + +THE LACES OF ITALY + + +[Illustration: VENETIAN ROSE POINT. + +Seventeenth Century. (_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +III + +THE LACES OF ITALY + +_The Venetian Laces_ + + Venetian lace--"Rose Point"--"Point de Neige"--"Gros + Point"--"Punto Tagliato a Foliami"--The South Kensington + Collection. + + +Needlepoint lace is made with needle and thread and principally in +buttonhole stitches. A traced parchment pattern is procured, the outline +made with a solitary thread stitched down to the parchment at frequent +intervals. The thread is then worked over with fine buttonhole stitches; +the modes or fillings have a fine network of threads stretched across, +afterwards being buttonholed into a variety of designs. The edges are +then again worked upon with loops or picots, and in "Rose Point" tiny +stars or roses are worked on suitable parts of the design, sometimes the +"roses" or "stars" being three in numbers, one poised upon the other. +This is known as "Point de Neige" the whole surface of the lace being +literally sprinkled with tiny stars somewhat representing a fine +snowfall. The design is then connected with fine "brides," these in +their turn being dotted and purled with stars and loops. Most of this +exquisite lace requires a powerful magnifying-glass to discern the +intricacy of the work. + +The finest lace of this variety was produced in the sixteenth century, +the designs being bold, handsome, and purely Renaissance in type. That +of the Louis Quatorze period shows the personal influence of his reign, +frequently having tiny figures worked in the design. A collar in my +possession has the Indian worshipping the sun (the King's glory was said +to rival that of the sun) repeated in each scallop. This was a favourite +design in the magnificent "Point de France" which was made during the +long reign of Louis, under the management of Colbert. + +It is absolutely certain that the laces known as Venetian Point +originated in Italy. Pattern books still exist showing how the early +Reticella developed into this magnificent lace. In the National Library +at the South Kensington Museum, may be seen the very patterns designed +by Vinciolo, Vicellio, and Isabella Parasole. These publications +actually came from Venice, and being reproduced in France, Germany, +Belgium, and England, quickly aroused immense enthusiasm, and +lace-making spread far and wide, at first all other laces being mere +imitations of the Venetian. + +[Illustration: CORALLINE POINT (VENETIAN).] + +[Illustration: POINT PLAT DE VENISE (FLAT VENETIAN). + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +[Illustration: MARIE DE MEDICIS WEARING THE MEDICIS COLLAR TO DISPLAY +VENETIAN LACES.] + +The chief varieties of the Venetian laces are known as Rose Point, Point +de Neige, Gros Point de Venise (often erroneously attributed to Spain +and called Spanish Point), and Point Plat de Venise. A much rarer +variety is "Venetian point à réseau," which is the flat point worked +round with a Needlepoint ground or mesh, the network following no proper +order but being simply worked round the pattern and following its +curves. + +The chief characteristics of Venetian lace are the buttonhole Cordonnet, +fine or thick according to the style of lace; the wonderful diversities +of the fillings worked in buttonhole stitches; the elaborate decoration +of the Cordonnet; and the starry effects of the brides or ties. In the +flat Venetian Point there is no Cordonnet. + +These Italian laces were admired and purchased by all the European +countries, and the cities of Venice and Florence made enormous fortunes. +The fashions of the day led to their extensive use, Marie de Medicis +introducing the Medici collar trimmed with Venetian points specially to +display them. At a little later period the collar became more falling +and the heavier "Gros point" was used. Men and women alike wore +lace-trimmed garments to an excessive degree, the collar and cuff +trimmings being composed of wide Venetian lace and the silken scarf worn +across the body being edged with narrower and finer lace. + +The principal designs for the Venetian lace of all periods were scrolls +of flowers conventionalised in the Renaissance taste of the time. The +generic name for all laces of the finest period is "Punto tagliato a +foliami." The laces of this time are now almost priceless. They are +genuine works of art, worked slowly and patiently under the clear light +of the Italian skies by women who were naturally artistic and beauty +loving, and who, while working the shining needle and fairy thread in +and out of the intricacies of the design sang the pretty "Lace Songs" +which may be heard at the Burano Lace School even now, although 200 or +300 years old. Many specimens of this exquisite lace are to be found in +the South Kensington Museum, where the flounce given by Mrs. Bolckow at +once explains the whole scheme of Venetian lace-making. + +Such lace is not to be purchased now except at great price. The piece +illustrated, see page 55, was only 1-1/8 yards in length, and was sold +for £145 by one of our leading lacemen. Barely 5 yards of Venetian lace, +only 2 inches wide and _in rags_, was sold at Debenham & Storr's in +August, 1907, for £60; and even the smallest collar or a pair of cuffs +runs well into £10. + +Even in the days of its manufacture this lace commanded high prices. In +the inventory of Queen Elizabeth's gowns we find such entries as-- + +"To 1 yard Double Italian Cut-worke, 1/4 yd. wide. 55/4. + + " 3 yds. broad needlework lace of Italy, with purls. 50/- per yd." + +James II. paid £29 for a cravat. + +[Illustration: VERY FINE EXAMPLE OF "GROS POINT DE VENISE."] + + + + +IV + +THE LACES OF GENOA AND MILAN + + +[Illustration: LOUIS XIII. OF FRANCE, SHOWING VANDYKE LACE COLLAR AND +NARROWER LACE ON SCARF.] + + + + +IV + +THE LACES OF GENOA AND MILAN + + Argentella wrongly called Italian--Genoese--Mixed + laces--Milanese--Macramé. + + +These are mostly Pillow laces, but fine Point laces were also +manufactured in these towns. In the first-named town it is said that the +lace called "Argentella" was made, but this is extremely doubtful, most +authorities arguing that it was certainly a French lace made at the best +period. + +A very representative lace of Genoa is known as collar lace, very widely +used for the falling collars of the Vandyke period. It was an +exceedingly beautiful and decorative lace, and almost indestructible. +Specimens of this lace can even now easily be secured at a fair price. +The laces known as "Pillow Guipure" are somewhat open to question, the +authorities at South Kensington Museum agreeing to differ, and labelling +most of the specimens "Italian or Flemish." The finer pieces of this +type of lace may safely be described as "Flemish," as the flax-thread +grown and made in Flanders was much finer than that grown in the +Southern Countries. + +Much of the Genoa lace was worked in what we term "mixed lace," the +design being woven on the pillow, and the ground and fillings worked in +with the needle either in a network or by brides and picots. A much +inferior kind is made with a woven braid or tape, the turns of the +pattern being made in twisted or puckered braid, much after the style of +the handmade Point lace made in England some thirty years ago. This lace +was known as "Mezzo Punto," though the French were discourteous enough +to term it "Point de Canaille," as undoubtedly it was an imitation of +the finer laces made in a loose, poor style. + +The lace of Milan is unquestionably the most beautiful of the Pillow +laces of Italy. While resembling the plaited lace of Genoa, there is +more individuality about it. Much of this fine lace was worked for +church vestments and altar cloths. Various heraldic devices are +frequently introduced, surrounded with elegant scroll designs, the whole +being filled up with woven réseau, the lines of which are by no means +regular, but are made to fill in the interstices. + +Yet another Italian lace is known as + + +_Punto a Groppo, or Macramé_. + +No doubt this was the earliest form of woven lace, and, indeed, it may +claim an origin as early as the first garments worn by mankind. In the +earliest remains of antiquity a _fringe_ often decorates the edges of +garments, curtains, and floor-covering, and seems to be a natural and +fitting finish to what would otherwise be a hard, straight line. In +the various Assyrian and Egyptian monuments this is noted again and +again. + +[Illustration: GENOESE LACE. + +Sixteenth or Seventeenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Some of the sixteenth-century pieces which we possess show simply an +elaboration of the knotted fringe, while much of the later work is +exceptionally fine. The work is so well known, owing to its revival +during the last thirty years in a coarse form, that it needs little +description. Its use, even at its best period, was confined to household +use, for which purpose it seems particularly adapted. + +[Illustration: MILANESE LACE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +V + +THE LACES OF FRANCE + + +[Illustration: "CUT-WORKE."] + +[Illustration: LACIS.] + +[Illustration: OLD ITALIAN AND FRENCH CUT AND DRAWN WORK AND "LACIS." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +V + +THE LACES OF FRANCE + +_The Needlepoint Laces of France_ + + Catherine de Medici's collection of "Lacis"--Establishment of + lace-making by Colbert--"Point de France"--"Point + d'Alençon"--"Point d'Argentan"--Modern reproduction of these at + Burano, Italy. + + +France in the sixteenth century, as always, led the van of fashion. Lace +appears to have been extensively used long before its apotheosis at the +Court of Louis le Grand, otherwise Louis XIV. Catherine de Medici +patronised the manufacture of "_Lacis_," which was merely darned +netting, more or less fine. At this time "Lacis" and "Cut-worke" were +practically all that was known or used. Bed-hangings, curtains, and +furniture-coverings were covered with alternate squares of lacis and +cutwork. Afterwards the Reticella laces of Italy were imported and had +an immense vogue, but it was not until the artistically glorious time of +Louis XIV. that an attempt was made to encourage a manufacture of French +laces. + +Colbert, the astute Minister of Louis XIV., became alarmed at the +immense sums of money which went out of the country to purchase the +laces of Venice, and, by means of bribing the best workers of the +Venetian schools, he induced them to settle at L'Onray, near Alençon. In +1665 he had so far succeeded that lace rivalling that of Venice was +being produced. The Venetians became alarmed in their turn (as, indeed, +they had need to be) and issued an edict, ordering the lace-workers to +return forthwith, or, failing this, the nearest relative would be +imprisoned for life, and steps would be taken to have the truant +lace-worker _killed_. If, however, he or she returned, complete +forgiveness would be extended, and work found them _for life_ at +handsome remuneration. History does not tell us the result of this +decree, but it evidently failed to destroy the lace manufacture of +France. + +At first the lace manufactured at Alençon received the name of "Point de +France," and was absolutely indistinguishable from that of Venice. Its +magnificence of design, indeed, may be said to have exceeded anything +before attempted. The introduction of tiny figures was attributable to +the overwhelming personality of Louis XIV., and was symbolical of his +magnificent sway and far-reaching influence. In the illustration, page +55, an especially fine specimen of the lace, Madame de Montespan is seen +seated under the crown, two small Indians are on either side; a tree +bearing flags and trophies completes this tribute to the genius of the +lace-makers and the splendour of the Court. + +[Illustration: "POINT DE FRANCE." + +(_The property of Lady Kenmare._)] + +[Illustration: POINT D'ALENÇON. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +The name "Point de France" is given to all lace made from its +commencement by Colbert's direction until about 1678, when the +lace-workers, perhaps forgetting the traditions of the Venetian school, +developed a style of their own and the work became more distinctly +French, being more delicate, finer in substance, the patterns clearer +and more defined. The importation also of the finer flax thread from +Flanders brought the more exquisite Pillow lace of Brussels to the +notice of the French lace-workers. The French, as a nation, have always +been foremost in seizing upon new ideas and adapting them to their own +artistic requirements. In this instance the result was admirable, and it +gave to the world, not the finest lace, as it was impossible to surpass +the earliest Venetian Point laces, but certainly the next lace in order +of merit, "Point d'Alençon." The chief characteristic of the lace is the +fine, clear ground, the stiff Cordonnet outlining the pattern, and the +exquisite patterns in the "jours" or fillings. + +The cordonnet of Alençon is the only one which has horsehair for its +foundation. A strand of hair is carefully stitched down to the edges and +is buttonholed over with the finest thread, and is said, although giving +the lace quite a character of its own, to have been the cause of much of +its destruction, as, in washing, the hair contracts and curls. It will +be noticed also that the ground is worked in strips, _shortways of the +lace of less than an inch in length_, afterwards being stitched together +in what is known as "fine joining." So elaborate was the original Point +d'Alençon that no less than eighteen workers were engaged on one single +piece. Later the number was reduced to twelve, when the patterns became +less ornate. + +Although the factory of Alençon existed well into the early nineteenth +century, the style of lace gradually deteriorated, until it is now +non-existent! The lace made during the long reign of Louis XIV. is +considered by far the finest and best, showing both grandeur of style +and pattern and exquisite workmanship. Under Louis XV. the lace was +equally well made, but the patterns followed the Rococo designs which +were now introduced into all other decorative work, while in the reign +of the ill-fated Louis XVI. it went completely out of fashion, Marie +Antoinette affecting a much simpler style of lace. The Revolution +finally caused the complete overthrow of Alençon lace, as of all fine +art work in France. An attempt was made by Napoleon I. to revive it, but +its glories had passed, and the hands of the workers had lost their +cunning, the result being known as the worst type of lace, stiff and +ugly in design and coarse of execution. + + +"_Point d'Argentan._" + +This lace is practically the same as Alençon with a variation of ground, +which, to the uninitiated, appears coarse. A magnifying glass, however, +will speedily dispel this illusion. The ground in itself is a marvellous +piece of work, each of the sides of the mesh being covered with ten +buttonhole stitches. Very frequently a mixed lace of Alençon and +Argentan is found, the result being very fine. + +[Illustration: "POINT DE FRANCE." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +[Illustration: POINT D'ARGENTELLA.] + + +_Point d'Argentella._ + +About this lace most authorities dispute, some stoutly advocating its +claims to be French lace entirely and others averring that it was made +_in imitation_ of the Point d'Alençon by the Genoese. Be this as it may, +the lace known as Point d'Argentella is exceptionally fine even amongst +other fine laces, and is noted most specially for the fine "jours" which +form an essential part of the pattern, every effort apparently being +made to give extra scope for their employment. The specimen illustrated +shows some of these "jours" having the characteristic mayflower, +lozenge, and dotted patterns. + +Much modern lace of this type is now made at Burano, Italy, where the +coarse Italian lace formerly made there has been entirely superseded. It +strongly imitates Alençon and Argentan lace, but is without the raised +cord which is so typical of these, having the pattern outlined with flat +buttonhole stitches only. By many connoisseurs this is considered the +finest lace of this age, being far superior to modern Brussels. It is +entirely handmade, which cannot be, unfortunately, averred for Brussels, +as the fine machine-made net, woven from the exquisitely fine thread +manufactured in Flanders and Belgium, serves as the ground for all +Brussels lace made at the present time, except when special orders like +Royal trousseaux are in hand. The lace-makers of Burano, it may be +added, imitate the finest Venetian Rose Point, Point de Gaze, Alençon, +ever produced, the prices comparing very favourably with the old work, +though still very costly. + +[Illustration: POINT D'ARGENTAN WITH POINT D'ALENÇON BORDER. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +[Illustration: ARGENTELLA LACE, SHOWING THE "PARTRIDGE-EYE" GROUND. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +VI + +THE PILLOW LACES OF FRANCE + + +[Illustration: EARLY VALENCIENNES. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +[Illustration: OLD VALENCIENNES. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +VI + +THE PILLOW LACES OF FRANCE + + Valenciennes, "Vraie" and "Fausse"--Lille--Chantilly-- + Blonde--Caen and Brittany. + + +_Valenciennes._ + +Valenciennes was formerly part of Flanders, being in the province of +Hainault. It became a French town in 1668 by treaty. Being a Flemish +town, the lace made there was purely Pillow lace, and in fineness of +thread and beauty of design it rivalled in its early stages some of the +fine old Flemish laces, which are more like ornamental cambric than +anything else. + +There are two kinds of Valenciennes lace, known as "Vraie" and "Fausse." +These names are very misleading, as they merely denote the laces made in +the town itself, or in the outskirts. + +Early Valenciennes can only be distinguished from Flemish laces of the +same age by the difference in the _ground_. By reference to the little +chart of lace stitches the distinction will easily be seen, the +Valenciennes being much closer and thicker in the plait, and having +four threads on each side of its diamond-shaped mesh. Conventional +scrolls and flowers were used as designs for the toile, the ground and +the pattern being made at the same time. + +This lace is said to have been worked, like that of Brussels, in dark, +damp cellars, the moist atmosphere being necessary to prevent the tiny +thread breaking. The lace-workers became nearly blind, and quite +useless, long before they reached thirty years of age. + +So expensive was the fabric that a pair of ruffles for a gentleman's +coat would sell for 4,000 livres. Madame du Barri made extravagant use +of this lovely lace. In her wardrobe accounts are mentioned, in 1771, +head-dress, throatlets, fichus, and ruffles, "all plissé de Vraie +Valenciennes." The amount of lace used for a head-dress alone is said to +have cost 2,400 livres. + +The "Vraie Valenciennes" was practically indestructible, earning the +nickname of the "Eternal Valenciennes" from its durability. The +well-to-do bourgeoise used to invest her savings in real lace, +treasuring and wearing it on all best occasions for a lifetime. + +The lace-makers of the town itself were so satisfied with their own lace +that they proudly boasted that if a length commenced in the town of +Valenciennes were taken and completed _by the same worker, and with the +same thread_, outside their own damp atmosphere, the exact point of +difference would be shown in the piece. + +[Illustration: "OLD LILLE." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +The earliest Valenciennes laces show a closer design than that made +later, which, by the way, many connoisseurs much prefer. The latter type +is of clearer ground and more open design. The flowers do not follow the +large scroll-like pattern of Flanders, but suggest the detached sprays +and festoons of Alençon and Argentan. In both types there is no cord +outlining either pattern or edge. All is flat as a piece of fine lawn. + + +_Lille._ + +By no means a _favourite_ lace at any time, Lille ranks next in merit as +a hand-made lace. The mesh is clearer and larger than most French or +Belgian laces, being made by the simple twisting of two threads on four +sides. The patterns are simple, and are outlined with a loose flax +thread of silky appearance. The straight edges which characterise Old +Lille lace certainly did not lend elegance to it. A large manufacture in +black lace was commenced, and the black silk mantles of the eighteenth +century were lavishly trimmed with it. It is entirely out of favour at +this day, however, only the finest white variety being sought after. + +Lace is still manufactured at Lille, but the patterns of Mechlin are +copied, although the tiny square dots, one of the distinguishing points +of old Lille, are still used. + + +_Chantilly._ + +The white laces of Chantilly much resemble Lille, having the same fine, +clear ground and a thick, silky-looking thread outlining the pattern. A +little lace school was established by the Duchesse de Rohan early in +the seventeenth century, and for quite a hundred years white laces were +made, and became popular. Marie Antoinette used this pretty lace as well +as Valenciennes extensively to trim her favourite lawn dresses and +fichus when she and the ladies of her Court retired to the Petit Trianon +to play at being shepherdesses. + +About the middle of the eighteenth century Chantilly began to produce +black silk lace of very fine quality. This is practically the only black +lace for which there is any market. A Chantilly fan or a Chantilly shawl +will always find purchasers. The exquisite fineness of its ground, the +elegance of its floral festoons and bouquets, make it a desirable +possession. With the Revolution the manufacture of real old black +Chantilly ceased, and was only revived with the Empire, when, in +addition to copying the old designs, the manufacture of the famous +_blonde_ laces was commenced. + + +_French Blonde Lace._ + +At first these filmy silk laces were made in the natural colour floss +silk imported from China, hence its name "Blonde." Some of the finest +specimens are in this colour. Afterwards, when the art of bleaching the +silk was discovered, it was made in a peculiarly silvery colour, the +loosely woven silk being worked in patterns on what appears a ground of +gossamer. Black Blonde was afterwards manufactured, the lace being very +different to that of nineteenth-century manufacture, the mesh being +large and open. This was a favourite lace with the Spaniards for +mantillas, and much prosperity resulted to the little town of Chantilly. +As with all other laces, the introduction of machinery killed the +industry as an art, and the only Blonde laces now made are by machine, +and are quite inartistic and inelegant. Hand-made Chantilly in black +silk is still manufactured, but it has only a limited output. + +[Illustration: "THE EMPRESS EUGENIE" WEARING BLONDE LACE. + +(_From a Baxter print._)] + + +_Other French Laces._ + +Lace has been made in many smaller towns in France, but in no instance +has it been of sufficient artistic merit to have made a name. Caen +manufactured Blonde lace in imitation of Chantilly. In Normandy the +peasant women and girls in the eighteenth century were specially +diligent, and made praiseworthy imitations of Mechlin, Flemish guipure +laces, and Brussels, and also introduced the working of gold and silver +thread and even beads, which was much used in churches. Some really +exquisite Blonde lace made in this manner was produced at Caen, fine +pearls were used in the place of beads, and this lace became extremely +popular in England. The Empress Eugénie was particularly fond of it, and +in most of the portraits of her at the zenith of her beauty she is seen +wearing decorated Blonde lace. It is said that this lace so soon soiled +and spoiled in the making that only women having specially dry hands +could be employed, and that during the summer months the lace was worked +in the open air, and in the winter in rooms specially built over +cow-houses, so that the animals' breath might just sufficiently warm +the workers in this smokeless atmosphere. Other towns engaged in +lace-making were Havre, Dieppe (the latter town making a lace resembling +Valenciennes), Bayeux, which carried on an extensive trade with the +Southern Islands; Mexico and Spain taking an inferior and heavy Blonde +lace for mantillas. + +In Bretagne so dear is lace to the heart of the French peasant woman +that every garment is trimmed with lace, often of her own making; and +along with the provision of a little "dot" for her daughter she makes +pieces of lace for her wedding dress. A curious custom is noted, that +the peasant woman often wears this treasured garment only twice, once +for her wedding and lastly for her funeral! + + + + +VII + +THE LACES OF FLANDERS + + +[Illustration: POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Period Louis XIV. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +VII + +THE LACES OF FLANDERS + + Early Flemish--Brussels lace--Point d'Angleterre--Cost of real + Flanders flax thread--Popularity of Brussels lace--Point Gaze. + + +Whether Italy or Flanders first invented both Needlepoint and Pillow +laces will ever remain a moot point. Both countries claim priority, and +both appear to have equal right. Italian Needlepoint without doubt +evolved itself from the old Greek or Reticella laces, that in turn being +a development of "Cutworke" and drawn thread work. Flanders produces her +paintings by early artists in which the portraits are adorned with lace +as early as the fourteenth century. An altar-piece by Quentin Matys, +dated 1495, shows a girl making Pillow lace, and later, in 1581, an old +engraving shows another girl busy with her pillow and bobbins. An early +Flemish poet thus rhapsodises over his countrywomen's handiworks: + + "Of many arts, one surpasses all; + The threads woven by the strange power of the hand-- + Threads, which the dropping of the spider would in vain + attempt to imitate, + And which Pallas herself would confess she had never known." + +Whether Flanders imitated the Italian laces or not, it is unquestioned +that every other lace-making country imitated _her_. Germany, Sweden, +France, Russia, and England have, one after the other, adopted her +method to such an extent that, following the tactics of Venice in 1698, +she also issued an edict threatening punishment to all who would entice +her workers away. + +So alike are the early laces of Flanders that it is impossible to +distinguish what is known as Flemish Point, Brussels Point, and Point +d'Angleterre. The last-named lace is peculiar, inasmuch as it has a +French appellation, is named "English," and yet is purely Brussels in +character. Two stories gather round this lace, which accounts for its +name. One is that the English Government in the time of Charles II., +seeing so much money go out of the country, forbade the importation of +Brussels lace. The English lace merchants, not to be done out of their +immense profits, smuggled it over in large quantities, and produced it +as having been made in Devonshire, and sold it under the name of English +Point. Another legend is that when Colbert, in the reign of Louis XIV., +determined to encourage lace-making in his own country, made prohibitive +the importation of any other lace than France's own manufacture, the +French Court, which had already become enamoured of Brussels lace, +therefore had it smuggled into England and thence to France, as +_English laces_ were at that time too insignificant to come under +Colbert's ban. + +[Illustration: POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Period of Louis XIV. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +Whichever tale we choose to believe is of little consequence. It is +sufficient to say that fine Point d'Angleterre is simply Brussels of the +best period when the glorious Renaissance was at its height. It is +absolutely indistinguishable from Brussels of the same period. The +specimen lappet, illustrated, shows the "figure" motif which appears in +"Point de France" and the old "Venetian Point," and which at once dates +its manufacture. + +Practically the term Flanders or Flemish lace can be applied to all the +laces made in Flanders and Belgium of the earliest periods. It is +peculiarly fine; the specimen shown is as fine as gossamer, showing a +total absence of Cordonnet, of course, and not even having the loose +thread which marks the stems and leaves of Brussels and Angleterre. The +flax of Flanders was at the time of the great lace industry known and +imported to all the towns engaged in making it. Italy could procure +nothing so fine and eminently suitable to the delicate work she made her +own as this fine thread, grown in Flanders, and spun in dark, damp +rooms, where only a single ray of light was allowed to enter. The thread +was so fine, it is said, that it was imperceptible to the naked eye and +was manipulated by touch only. The cost of this thread was £240 a pound, +and one pound could be made into lace worth £720! Real Flanders lace +thread even now, spun with the help of machinery, costs £70, and is +nothing like so durable as the old threads. When we consider that lace +to be known as "Old Lace" must be two hundred or three hundred years +old, we can understand the strength of this fairy thread, which was like +a spider's web in filminess and yet durable enough to last centuries of +wear, and remain as a lasting memorial of its beauty. + + +BRUSSELS + +The early Flemish laces cannot be traced to any particular town, but +Brussels early obtained a reputation for the production of the soft, +elegant laces which are variously known as "Real old Brussels," "Point +d'Angleterre," "Point d'Aiguille," and "Point de Gaze." Almost every +woman, although knowing little about lace as an art, knows and easily +recognises "Brussels." It has ever been the most popular lace, partly +because its price has never been actually prohibitive, although always +costly. Choice pieces of Old Brussels, with real ground, rank among the +laces of France and Venice as pieces of price, but the later period, +especially the kind known as Brussels applique, is within everybody's +reach, even if only as a border for a best handkerchief. + +[Illustration: "OLD BRUSSELS" (HAND-MADE GROUND). + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +[Illustration: BRUSSELS LAPPET, MADE IN IMITATION OF ALENÇON AND +ARGENTAN.] + +Lace made at Brussels at all periods has one characteristic that places +it at once and makes identification easy at a glance. The threads of the +toilé--that is, the pattern--follows the _curves_, instead of, as in +other Flanders laces, being straight _up_ and _down_ and _across_, each +thread being exactly at right angles to the other; Brussels lace also +has a distinctive edge to its pattern. It has no Cordonnet, but a +little set of looped stitches worked along the edge of the design, +afterwards whipped over to keep the edge in place. This is most clearly +seen in every specimen, and, in conjunction with the curved toilé, at +once settles the vexed question of the origin of Point d'Angleterre. + +The mesh or ground is, again, quite different to other laces. It has +three varieties of ground-- + +1. One, mostly used in Point d'Angleterre, being of fine "brides" with +four or five picots, but this ground is also seen in Venetian and French +laces. + +2. A hand-made ground made of looped buttonhole stitches, which is the +finest and most gossamer-like of all; and + +3. A woven ground made on the pillow with plaited thread, very like +Mechlin, but under the magnifying glass having two longer sides to its +hexagonal mesh, and therefore being more open and clear. + +The hand, or rather needlepoint, ground was three times more expensive +than the woven, as it was stronger and more lasting. The special value +of the "vrai reseau" in our own day is that it can be imperceptibly +repaired, the broken stitches replaced, whereas in the woven ground the +point of junction must show. + +The needle-made net is so fine that one piece in my possession, though +measuring 3/4 yard by 8 inches can easily, in its widest part, be +gathered and passed through a finger ring. At the present day this net +is not made, and even the fine woven ground is not used except for Royal +wedding orders or for exhibition purposes. A magnificent piece +belonging to Messrs. Haywards, of New Bond Street (which cannot be +photographed, unfortunately, as it is between two sheets of glass, and +might fall to pieces if taken out), was made for George IV., and not +delivered, owing no doubt to the usual depleted state of that monarch's +exchequer. Messrs. Haywards (whose courtesy is as boundless as their +reputation) are always pleased to show this and their other splendid +specimen collections to those interested in old lace. + +Perhaps no lace is so diversified in style as Brussels. At first it was +purely Flemish, and almost indistinguishable from it. Then the Venetian +influence crept in, and elaboration of pattern and the Renaissance +scrolls and flower work showed itself. At the Louis Quatorze period the +introduction of the "fairy people," seen at its finest and best in Point +de France, marks a time of special beauty. Afterwards the influence of +Alençon was shown (though it never rivalled the exquisite lace of this +factory), and from that time to the present day these designs have +remained for use in its best work. + +Some of the choicest specimens of old Brussels are shown in the now +discarded "lappets," which when a lace head-piece and lappets were part +of every gentlewoman's costume, were actually regulated by Sumptuary +Laws as to length. The longer the lappets the higher the rank. + +[Illustration: BRUSSELS LAPPET. + +Eighteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +The great Napoleon, while reviving the lace-making of Alençon, specially +admired fine old Brussels, and at the birth of his only son, the little +"King of Rome," ordered a christening garment covered with the +Napoleonic "N's," crowns and cherubs. This was sold in 1903 at +Christie's for £120. At the same sale a Court train realised £140. + +In the "Creevy Papers, 1768-1838," mention is made of Lord Charles +Somerset complaining of not having slept all night, "not having had a +minute's peace through sleeping in 'Cambrik sheets,' the Brussels lace +with which the pillows were trimmed tickling his face"! This occurred at +Wynyards, the seat of the Earl of Londonderry. + +Queen Anne followed the extravagant fashion of wearing the costliest +laces which William III. and Queen Mary carried to such an excess. In +1710 she paid £151 for 21 yards of fine Brussels edging, and two years +later the account for Brussels and Mechlin laces amounted to £1,418. + +In the succeeding reign the ladies of George I.'s period wore lappets +and flounces, caps, tuckers, aprons, stomachers, and handkerchiefs, all +made of Brussels. + +In the time of George II. lace was even more worn, but English lace +began to rival Brussels, not in quality, but as a substitute. + +George III. and his wife, Queen Charlotte, were economists of the first +order, and personal decoration was rigidly tabooed; hence the almost +total extinction of lace as an article of apparel, while in George IV.'s +time dress had evolved itself into shimmery silks and lawns, lace being +merely a trimming, and the enormous head-dress decorated more frequently +with a band of ribbon. + +An exquisite portrait of Louis Philippe's Queen, Marie Amelia, by the +early Victorian painter Winterhalter (whose paintings are again by the +revival of fashion coming into favour) shows this fine old _grande dame_ +in black velvet dress covered with three graduated flounces of Brussels +lace, cap and lappets and "tucker" of the same lace, lace fan, and, sad +to relate, a scarf of English machine-made net, worked with English run +embroidery! + +Although good Queen Adelaide had a pretty fancy for lace, she wore +little of it, and it was left to Queen Victoria to revive the glory of +wearing Brussels to any extent; and she, alas! was sufficiently +patriotic to encourage home-made products by wearing almost exclusively +Honiton, which I personally am not good Englishwoman enough to admire +except at its latest stage (just the past few years), when lace-making, +as almost every other art work in this country, is emerging from what, +from an artistic point of view, has been one long Slough of Despond. + +[Illustration: COMTESSE D'ARTOIS, WIFE OF ONE OF LOUIS XIV.'S GRANDSONS, +WEARING FINE BRUSSELS LACE.] + + + + +VIII + +THE MODERN BRUSSELS LACES AND MECHLIN + + +[Illustration: AN OLD PRINT OF "MARIE ANTOINETTE," SHOWING THE +SIMPLICITY OF ADORNMENT SHE AFFECTED. + +"MECHLIN" LACE.] + + + + +VIII + +THE MODERN BRUSSELS LACES AND MECHLIN + + Modern Brussels, Point Gaze--Ghent--Duchesse Point--Mechlin + (the Queen of Laces). + + +Magnificent laces are still made at Brussels, but almost wholly on a +machine-made ground, the workers and merchants apparently finding the +old hand-made ground unprofitable. The machine-made ground is cheap, and +often of mixed flax and cotton instead of being of purely Flanders flax +thread, as in the old days. Both quality and colour suffer from this +admixture, the lace washing badly and wearing worse. + +The most common lace is the Point Applique, in which the sprays, groups, +and borders on the design are made separately by hand on the pillow, and +are afterwards applied by tiny stitchings to the machine-made net. Some +qualities are better than others. In the better class the sprays are +appliqued to the net, which is then cut away and the interstices of the +design filled in with hand-made modes and brides, making a very pretty +and showy lace. The best lace made in Brussels now is + + +_Point Gaze_, + +in which the finest modern lace is produced. Its chief characteristics +are its superb designs, repeating many of the fine Renaissance patterns, +its clear ground, and its use of shading in leaves and flowers, which, +while it adds much to the sumptuous effect, is possibly too +naturalistic. This lace is a mixture of hand and machine lace, the +ground being of the best machine net, the flowers and sprays frequently +needle made, the various fillings being composed of a variety of +designs, and the shading often being produced in the needle-darning as +in modern Ghent and Limerick. Point de Gaze is costly, but it has the +reputation of appearing "worth its money" to which few other laces of +the present day can aspire. + +Other lace-making towns in Belgium and Flanders are-- + + +_Ghent_, + +which produces a fine machine-made net, worked and embroidered in exact +imitation of the earliest Limerick lace. So _real_ is this imitation +that a fine flounce of 4 yds. 32 in. wide was sold at a London +auction-room a few months ago, as "real old Limerick," for £60! + +Ghent executes vast quantities of hand-made imitations of Valenciennes, +a good and durable lace, but much more expensive than the machine-made +varieties which flood the shops as "real Val." + +[Illustration: MECHLIN LAPPET. + +Eighteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Perhaps the only other lace worth mentioning in smaller and later +varieties is that known as "Duchesse point" or "Bruges," which while +being a showy, decorative, and cheap lace, is anything but satisfactory +either in design, manufacture, or wear. It is largely composed of +cotton, is heavy and cumbrous in design, and after washing becomes thick +and clumsy. It is pillow-made, the flowers being made on the cushion and +afterwards united by coarse and few brides. + +Almost equal in favour with old Brussels lace was + + +MECHLIN, + +which was aptly termed "the Queen of Laces." Old Mechlin was wondrously +fine, and transparent. It is often spoken of as "Point de Malines" +which, of course, is entirely wrong, as it is not Point at all--being +made entirely, all at one time, or in one piece, on the pillow. Much of +the lace known under the general name of Flemish Point is really Malines +or Mechlin, the only difference being the fine silvery thread which runs +all through the designs of real Mechlin. The earliest date of the +manufacture of Mechlin is unknown, but in 1681, it is recorded, that the +people of Malines busied themselves with making a white lace known as +Mechlin. It became a fashionable lace in England in 1699, Queen Mary +using it considerably and Queen Anne buying it largely, in one instance +purchasing 83 yards of it for £247. + +It has always remained a favourite lace with English royalties, Queen +Charlotte almost exclusively using it. The other day I discovered in a +bric-à-brac shop about twenty yards of it, old and discoloured, it is +true, which came directly from Queen Caroline, the ill-used wife of +George IV. In the earlier Mechlin, although pillow-made, the +introduction of the "brides with picots," and also the may-flower +patterns of Brussels, helped to make it more decorative. The ground or +réseau was very similar to Brussels hand-made, but the hexagonal mesh is +shorter, as reference to the diagram of réseaux will show. + +The exquisite "lightness" of Mechlin, so specially adapted to +"quillings" and "pleatings," accounted for its popularity. It was +specially suitable to the lawns and muslins of the eighteenth century, +but little of this lace is left owing, no doubt, to its great favour +except the ubiquitous "lappets," for which it was no doubt "the Queen of +Lace." + +The immediate cause of its extinction was the introduction of Blonde +laces, and later its final overthrow came from its being the easiest +lace to reproduce by machinery. + +[Illustration: MARIE ANTOINETTE, QUEEN OF LOUIS XVI., SHOWING HOW +MECHLIN LACE WAS USED. + +From an old fashion plate.] + + + + +IX + +OTHER CONTINENTAL LACES + + + + +IX + +OTHER CONTINENTAL LACES + + Spanish lace; Gold and silver laces of Spain--German + laces--Russian laces--Maltese silk and thread laces. + + +Outside the great lace-making countries of Italy, France, and Flanders, +little lace was ever made, and that little of less consequence. + + +_Spanish Lace._ + +Much of the old lace known as "Spanish Point" is not Spanish at all, but +the best of Italian Rose Point on a large scale, being the variety known +as Gros Point. It was not extensively used for dress purposes, as +contemporary portraits show, but Spain being such an ultra-Romanist +country, vast quantities of it were imported into Spain for church use. +When Spain fell on unhappy days, in 1830, and the religious houses were +dissolved, this lace was eagerly bought by connoisseurs and collectors +and became known as Spanish Point. It is not unlikely that the Italian +lace was copied by the nuns of the Spanish convents; indeed, at South +Kensington Museum there is a set of church altar lace which is +admittedly Spanish work and is a distinct but far off imitation of +Italian Point. + +Spain made gold and silver laces of fine quality and gorgeous design. +Blonde laces in both cream and black are almost indigenous to the soil, +and a particular kind of black Blonde, embroidered with colours, +specially appealed to the colour-loving people. + + +_German Laces._ + +Perhaps at the present day more lace is made in Germany than at any +other period. An enormous manufacture of good machine-made lace is +exported yearly, the variety known as Saxony being both popular and +cheap. + +Germany has no national lace, the clever _hausfraus_ caring more to +decorate their table and bed-linen than their persons, and using the +substantial and practical embroideries of the cross-stitch patterns more +than the elegant frailties of lace trimming. Lacis network darned into +patterns has always been popular here, as also in Denmark, Sweden, and +Norway. + +[Illustration: DUCHESSE LACE. + +Modern.] + + +_Russia._ + +The Russian laces need little more than a passing note. As in Germany, +Lacis and Cutworke form the only hand-made lace known, the people +contenting themselves with these varieties and using coloured threads to +further decorate them. Their laces may be called merely Russian +embroideries. Peter the Great did much to found a lace school, but +only gold laces were made, of a barbaric character. Recently an attempt +has been made to imitate the Venetian laces, with very fair results, but +the character is very stiff and mechanical, going back to the primitive +forms of Reticella rather than the elegancies of Italian Point. + +The only other Continental lace requiring note is + + +_Maltese_, + +a lace made entirely with bobbins and on a pillow. This lace is of +ancient make, being known as early as the old Greek laces, which it +strongly resembles. Its very popularity has killed its use as a fine +lace, and at the present day it is copied as a cheap useful lace in +France, England, Ireland, and even India. The old Maltese lace was made +of the finest flax thread, afterwards a silk variety, which is well +known, being made in cream. Black lace was also manufactured, and at the +time of the popularity of black lace as a dress trimming it was much +used. At the present day the lace is not of the old quality, cotton +being frequently mixed with the flax threads. There is no demand for it, +and it is about the most unsaleable lace of the day. + + + + +X + +A SHORT HISTORY OF LACE IN ENGLAND + + +[Illustration: QUEEN ELIZABETH: RUFF OF VENETIAN POINT. + +(_National Portrait Gallery._)] + + + + +X + +A SHORT HISTORY OF LACE IN ENGLAND + + Early samplers--Lace worn by Queen Elizabeth; by the early + Stuarts--Extravagant use of lace in time of Charles + II.--William and Mary's lace bill. + + +Even at the risk of being considered utterly unpatriotic, I cannot give +much more than faint praise to the lace-making of England up to the +present date, when notable efforts are at last being made to raise the +poor imitation of the Continental schools to something more in +accordance with artistic conception of what a great National Art might +become. + +As in all countries, lace-making apparently commenced in its early +English stages by drawn-thread and cutwork. In many of the charming old +sixteenth-century English samplers just as exquisite cut-work, and its +natural successor Reticella, or "punto in aria" is shown, as in the +finest examples of the Venetian schools. Unfortunately, however, English +fine lace-making came to a sudden and inexplicable end, although we know +that any quantity of fine Venetian, exquisite Brussels, or Flemish +laces, and the wonderful Point de France were being imported into the +country and lavishly used. + +As early as the reign of Edward IV. lace was mentioned as being +prohibited for importation amongst other items of feminine luxury, such +as "ribans, fringes of silk and cotton," but it is considered that the +word "laces" here means only the twisted threads that go to make up a +lace or tie, commonly ending in tags or points. It must be allowed, +however, that laces, or more probably "gimps" of gold and silver threads +were used for trimming both lay and ecclesiastical garments, and in +Henry VII.'s reign we find that importation of Venetian lace was +permitted, but this is generally admitted still to refer to gold and +silver lace, more probably coming from Genoa. + +It was not really until the time of bluff King Hal that lace became an +article of fashion, when during the life of the last of his unfortunate +queens he permits "the importation of all manner of gold and silver +fringes, or _otherwise_, with all new 'gentillesses' of what facyion or +value, for the pleasure of our dearest wyeff the Queen." + +Henry himself also began to indulge in all these little elegances of +fashion, and wore his sleeves embroidered with cutwork, and +handkerchiefs edged with gold and silver, treating himself liberally to +"coverpanes" and "shaving-cloths" trimmed with gold lace. + +[Illustration: EDMUND SPENSER: COLLAR TRIMMED WITH RETICELLA. + +Early period.] + +Little mention of white work was made in the inventories of Henry VIII. +or his Queens, but Cardinal Wolsey seems to have had more than his +share of cutwork embroideries, judging from contemporary portraits. + +In Queen Mary's reign white work began to be more frequently spoken of, +and in 1556 it is stated that Lady Jane Seymour presented the Queen with +"a smock of fair white work, Flanders making." + +It was not until Queen Elizabeth's time that lace became freely +mentioned; then suddenly we are introduced to an endless variety of lace +and trimmings, both of gold and silver, pearl and embroideries, and +various white work! In some of the old Chronicles mention was made of +drawn work, cut-work, Crown lace, bone lace for ruffs, Spanish chain, +parchment, hollow, and diamond lace. Many of these terms cannot be +understood. + +The enormous ruffs worn by Queen Elizabeth were introduced into England +in the time of her sister Mary. Portraits both of Philip of Spain and +Queen Mary show ruffs, but not edged with lace. Queen Elizabeth's, on +the contrary, are both edged with lace and, in some instances, covered +with it. On her poor old effigy at Westminster Abbey, where her waxen +image is dressed in her actual garments, the only lace that appears is +on the enormous ruff, three-quarters of a yard wide, covered with a fine +lace of the loose network kind. The rest of her garments are trimmed +with gold and silver lace and _passementerie_. + +In the succeeding reign lace of a geometric design shows itself on the +ruffs of the richest people. Pictures in the National Portrait Gallery +show many exquisite examples of the beautiful Reticella of Venice, which +must have been very costly to the purchaser, as twenty-five yards or +more of this fine lace were required to edge a ruff. + +It was in the reign of James I. and his consort, Anne of Denmark, that +Flanders lace and the expensive Point laces of Italy first became widely +popular. Then, as now, they were costly--to such an extent that many +gentlemen sold an estate to buy laces for their adornment. + +It was during this reign that we first learn of a lace being made in +England, as Queen Anne of Denmark on her journey south purchased lace at +_Winchester_ and _Basing_, but history mentions not what kind of lace it +was. Apparently only a simple kind of edging was used, made on a pillow. + +The enormous ruffs went out of fashion with the death of James I. +Charles I., in all his portraits, wears the falling collar edged with +Vandyke lace. It was during this reign that Venetian lace reached its +apotheosis in England. The dress of the day has never been surpassed, +though it became much more elaborate and ostentatious in the time of +Charles II. and William and Mary. Falling collars were specially adapted +to the display of the handsome laces of Venice. The cuffs of the sleeves +were likewise trimmed with the same; scarves were worn across the +breast, trimmed with the narrower Reticella. + +[Illustration: SEVENTEENTH CENTURY FALLING COLLAR TRIMMED WITH FINE +RETICELLA. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +During the Commonwealth the laces of Venice suffered a temporary +eclipse, and the plainer laces of Flanders were freely used. Cromwell +himself, it is said, did not disdain the use of it. His effigy at +Westminster was dressed in a fine Holland lace-trimmed shirt, with bands +and cuffs of the same. This effigy, by the way, was destroyed at the +Restoration. + +Charles II., who during his exile in France had become imbued with the +extravagant taste of the French Court, gave vast orders for "Points of +Venice and Flanders," on the plea of providing English lace-workers with +better patterns and ideas. + +The falling collar certainly went out of fashion, but lace was liberally +used on other parts of the dress. Lace frills of costly Point edged the +knee-breeches, lace cravats were worn and deep falling cuffs. Charles +II., in the last year of his reign, spent £20 for a new cravat for his +brother's birthday. + +During James II.'s reign extravagance in lace purchases are still +mentioned, but it surely reached its culmination in the joint reign of +William and Mary, when enormous sums were spent by both King and Queen. +In one year Queen Mary's lace bill amounted to £1,918. New methods of +using lace were fashioned. A huge head-dress called the "Fontange," with +upright standing ends of Venetian Point, double hanging ruffles falling +from elbow sleeves, lace-trimmed aprons, lace tuckers, characterised the +feminine dress of the day, while the "Steinkirk" cravat and falling +cuffs of William III.'s day ran up accounts not much less than that of +his Queen. In 1690 his bill was £1,603, and in 1695 it amounted to +£2,459! + +The effigies of William and Mary in the Abbey, wear the very finest +Venetian Point laces. None of the other figures wear such costly lace, +nor in such profusion. + +[Illustration: COLLAR IN GROS POINT DE VENISE. + +Louis XIV. period. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +XI + +ENGLISH LACES + + + + +XI + +ENGLISH LACES + + Queen Anne and Mechlin--Establishment of lace-making in + Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire--Buckingham lace--Wiltshire + lace--Devonshire lace--Modern Honiton revival. + + +It was in Queen Anne's time that the earliest really good lace +manufactured in England appeared. Driven from France by the edict of +Louis XIV., the refugees found a home in England, and encouraged by +Queen Anne's fondness for laces other than Venetian, they made and +taught the English lace-workers, among whom they settled, the art of +real lace-making, which up to this time had apparently been only half +understood. Numerous lace schools now sprang up, the counties of +Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Northampton specially becoming known. +Valenciennes and Mechlin were the varieties of laces principally copied; +a very pretty lace, very reminiscent of Mechlin, being the "Baby lace," +which received its name from being so much used to trim babies' caps. +Although very much like Valenciennes and Mechlin, the laces were much +coarser both in thread and design than their prototypes. Bedfordshire +and Northamptonshire did not long retain the art of lace-making, but +Buckingham lace remained a staple manufacture, and is much esteemed even +to-day, many connoisseurs considering it far better as a lace than the +somewhat clumsy laces of Devonshire. The specimen shown is a piece of +old Buckingham lace closely copying the réseau and sprigs of Lille which +most lace-lovers consider it excels. The net of Buckinghamshire is an +exact copy of the Lille mesh, being made of two threads twisted in a +diamond pattern, the sprays being worked on the pillow at the same time. +The patterns of the old Buckingham lace are not very varied, the best +known being what is called "Spider lace," a coarse kind of open mesh +being worked in the pattern. The principal town engaged in the +eighteenth century was Newport Pagnel, which was cited as being most +noted for making Bobbin lace. Old Brussels designs were used, and some +quaint lace of early Flemish design, was made. The early English run +lace, which was even so late as fifty years ago very popular, was mostly +made here. Aylesbury, Buckingham, and High Wycombe also made lace, and +in the last-named old town cottage lace-making may be seen to this day. +Very quaint are the old lace bobbins that may be purchased in the +"antique" shops of these lace-making towns. The lace-workers apparently +indulged many a pretty fancy in shaping them in a diversity of ways, +very few bobbins being alike. Some were made of bone, really prettily +turned, with dotted and pierced patterns on them. Others were +silver-studded, and again others were banded in silver. The wooden ones +were always decorated, if possible, each one differently from the +others, so that the worker might distinguish each thread without looking +at it. Nearly every bobbin was ended with a bunch of coloured beads +strung on wire, and a collection of these bobbins, with their "gingles," +often yields up a pretty and quaint necklace. One in my possession has a +quaint bead made of "ancient Roman glass," worth at least ten shillings. +One wonders how this bit of Roman magnificence had strayed into an +English cottage home! + +[Illustration: "OLD BUCKINGHAM." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +[Illustration: EARLY DEVONSHIRE LACE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +Buckinghamshire is the only one of the Midland counties which has +produced _wide_ lace; the adjoining counties confined themselves to +edgings at most some 6 inches wide. A flounce in my collection measures +21 inches, and is of very elegant design, and of fine quality. In +Wiltshire lace appears to have been made at an early date in the +eighteenth century, but little lace is left to show its quality. A +curious piece is said to belong to an old family in Dorset, who vouch +for the lace having belonged to Queen Charlotte, the wife of George III. +Like many other traditional "antiques," this is undoubtedly a fairy +story, as it claims to have been made in commemoration of the defeat of +the Spanish Armada, _at contemporary times_. It is exceedingly handsome, +showing one of Philip's ships, very suggestively surrounded by big sea +fish and apparently resting on the rocky bottom of the ocean. In the +next panel Tilbury Fort is portrayed, and another ship, one of England's +glory, proudly rules the waves. The design is undoubtedly English, and +most probably it was made in commemoration of the historic event--but +the lace is Point d'Argentan, and was most likely manufactured specially +for Queen Charlotte. + +Lyme Regis at one time rivalled Honiton, the laces of both towns being +equally prized. Queen Charlotte wore a "head and lappets" made here when +she first came to England, and afterwards she ordered a splendid lace +dress to be made. When, however, Queen Victoria, in her wish to +encourage the English makers, sent an order for her marriage lace, not +sufficient workers were found to produce it. + + +DEVONSHIRE LACE. + +As early as 1614 the lace-makers of Devonshire were known. The influx of +refugees from Flanders in the Midlands and southern counties undoubtedly +established lace-making in both parts of the kingdom. Many of the +Honiton lace-workers married these refugees, and to this day the people +are of mixed descent. Quaint names of Flemish extraction appear over the +shop doors. + +In the early days both men, women, and children seem to have pursued the +art of lace-making, boys learning and working at it until the age of +sixteen, when they were either apprenticed to some trade or went to +sea. + +[Illustration: OLD HONITON (NEEDLEPOINT GROUND).] + +[Illustration: OLD HONITON. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +Most of the old Devonshire laces bear distinct likeness to the fine +Flemish lace, only the clumsiness of the design or the coarse +workmanship differentiating them. It has, however, one special feature +which gave it the name "Trolly lace," as, unlike the perfectly flat lace +of Flanders, it has a coarse thread or "trolly" outlining its patterns, +and being made of English thread, it was coarse and not very durable. + + +_Honiton_ + +has always easily ranked first amongst our British laces, although by +many not considered equal to fine Bucks. Like the Midland lace, it has +been always made with Flanders thread, and therefore has maintained its +popularity because of its _wear_ and its _colour_. The early Honiton +workers copied "Brussels" lace, but because of their inability to +produce an artistic design it has never been anything but a _poor_ copy. +Even when the Brussels influence was most direct the flowers and sprays +were placed inartistically, while the scroll copies of the early Flemish +schools can only be termed the imitative handiwork of a child. + +The most prized specimens of old Honiton are those with hand-made +ground, made of Flanders flax. Very little of this real ground Honiton +lace is left. Queen Victoria did much to make Honiton lace _the_ lace of +the land; but although a regular trade has been established, and much +good work accomplished, Honiton of the past will never be regarded on +the same plane as the laces of Venice, France, and Brussels. Even in its +best variety it lacks the exquisite filmy touch of Brussels, the dainty +grace of Alençon, and the magnificence of Point de France and Venetian +Point. The Honiton laces made since the introduction of machine-made net +is especially poor. Flower sprigs and sprays are made separately on the +pillow, and afterwards applied to the machine-made ground. These are, as +a rule, flowers and foliage treated naturalistically, and are heavy and +close in design. These are often very sparingly applied over a wide +expanse of net in order to make as much lace with as little trouble as +possible. This is very different to the work of the old Honiton +lace-worker, who made every inch of it herself--first the sprays and +scrolls, then worked the ground round it, and received, it is said, from +the middleman (who purchased it for the town market) as many shillings +as would cover the lace offered for sale. + +We are glad to say, however, that very praiseworthy efforts are being +made to introduce better methods and more artistic designs in the many +lace schools which are being formed in various parts of Devon. Mrs. +Fowler, of Honiton, one of the oldest lace-makers in this centre, making +exquisite lace, the technique leaving nothing to be desired, and also +showing praiseworthy effort in shaking off the trammels of the +traditional designs. + +[Illustration: MODERN HONITON, MADE BY MRS. FOWLER.] + + + + +XII + +SCOTCH AND IRISH LACES + + + + +XII + +SCOTCH AND IRISH LACES + + Hamilton lace--Mary Queen of Scots--Modern lace-making in + Ireland--Limerick lace--Carrick-ma-cross--Irish + crotchet--Convent laces. + + +Scotch lace can hardly be said to exist. At one time a coarse kind of +network lace called "Hamilton lace" was made, and considerable money was +obtained by it, but it never had a fashion, and deservedly so. Since the +introduction of machinery, however, there has been considerable trade, +and a tambour lace is made for flounces, scarfs, &c. The more artistic +class of work made by Scotswomen is that of embroidering fine muslin, +and some really exquisite work is made by the common people in their +homes. + +Much mention is often made of Mary Queen of Scots and her embroideries +and laces. It must be remembered that she married firstly the Dauphin of +France, and while at the French Court imbibed the taste for elegant +apparel and costly lace trimmings. There is no record that she ever wore +lace of her own country's manufacture, and, although English writers +often quote the lace made by her fair hands, really the needlework made +by Queen Mary at Fotheringay was embroidery. + + +_Irish Laces._ + +The early lace of Ireland was the usual cut and drawn work, and it was +not until the earlier part of the nineteenth century that lace-making +actually became a craft. In the eighteenth century many brave attempts +were made to commence lace schools, and the best work was done in the +convents, where really fine work was executed by the nuns, the patterns +having been sent from Italy. It was not until 1829 that the manufacture +of Limerick lace was first instituted. This really is not lace at all, +as it is merely chain-stitch worked in patterns on machine-made net. + +This pretty so-called lace was first made at Limerick by an Oxford man, +who established a school there, taking with him twenty-four girls as +teachers. It quickly became very popular, in the early "fifties" every +woman of either high or low degree possessing herself of at least a lace +collar or fichu of Limerick lace. + +In 1855 more than 1,500 workers were employed, but decidedly the best +lace of the manufacture belongs to the time prior to this date. The +quality of the net ground has also deteriorated, or perhaps the best net +has not been purchased. + +[Illustration: LIMERICK "FILLINGS."] + +Very dainty little sprays and flowers are produced in the fine chain or +tambour stitch, the hearts of the flowers or the centres of the scallops +being worked over in an endless variety of extra stitches, as will be +seen in the illustration. + +Another variety of lace is Carrick-ma-cross, which was contemporary with +Limerick. This is merely embroidery again, but has more claim to the +title of lace, as the tiny little flowers and scrolls are connected with +brides made of buttonhole stitch ornamented with picots. This is really +a very handsome lace, its only drawback being that it will not _wash_. +The fine lawn of which it is made is buttonholed round and then cut +away. This, in cleaning or washing, _contracts_ and leaves the +buttonhole edging, and in a few cleanings it is a mass of unmendable +rags. + +Slightly more serviceable is another variety of Carrick-ma-cross, on +which the lawn is appliquéd to a machine-made net, the pattern outlined +with buttonhole stitches, and the surplus lawn cut away, leaving the +network as a grounding, various pretty stitchings filling up the +necessary spaces. + +Yet another kind of lace is made, and is really the only real lace that +Ireland can claim. This is the Irish crotchet, which in its finer +varieties is a close imitation of Venetian Point, but made with fine +thread and with a crotchet needle. Some of the best is really worth +purchasing, but it is costly, realising as much as five guineas per +yard. A very delicate "Tatting" also comes from the Emerald Isle, and in +comparing English and Irish laces one is inevitably struck with the +reflection that there is more "artistry" in the production of Irish +laces and embroidery than in England with all her advantages. The +temperamental differences of the two races are distinctly shown in this, +perhaps more than any other art. + +Much really notable work is now being executed in the Irish lace +schools. At Youghal, co. Monaghan, an exact replica of old Venetian +Point is being worked. Various fine specimens from the school occupy a +place at South Kensington Museum, and the lace industry of Ireland may +be said to be in a healthy condition. + +[Illustration: CARRICK-MA-CROSS LACE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XIII + +HOW TO IDENTIFY LACE + + +[Illustration: THE CENTRE STRIP IS OLD "RETICELLA," WITH GENOA BORDERS. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XIII + +HOW TO IDENTIFY LACE + + Style--Historical data--Réseaux. + + +The great difficulty in attempting to identify any specimen of lace is +that from time to time each country experimented in the manners and +styles of other lace-making nations. The early Reticella workers copied +what is known as the "Greek laces," which were found in the islands of +the Grecian Archipelago. Specimens of these laces found in the +excavations of the last thirty years show practically no difference in +method and style. France copied the Venetian laces, and at one period it +is impossible to say whether a given specimen was made at Alençon or +Venice. Italy, in turn, imitated the Flemish laces--to such an extent +that even the authorities at South Kensington Museum, with all their +leisure and opportunities for study and the magnificent specimens at +hand for identification, admit that certain laces are either "Italian or +Flemish." Valenciennes was once a Flemish town, and though now French, +preserves the Flemish character of lace, some specimens of Mechlin +being so like Valenciennes as to baffle certainty. + +Later, Brussels borrowed the hand-made grounds of France and Venice, and +still later England copied Brussels, the guipures of Flanders, and the +ground and style of Lille! All this makes the initial stages of the +study of lace almost a hopeless quest. The various expensive volumes on +lace, although splendidly written and gorgeously illustrated, leave the +student with little more than an interesting and historical knowledge on +which to base the actual study of lace. Here I may refer my readers to +the one and only public collection of lace, I believe, in England--that +of the South Kensington Museum, where specimens of lace from all +countries and of all periods are shown, and where many magnificent +bequests, that of Mrs. Bolckow especially, make the actual study of lace +a possibility. + +It is to be hoped that the governing body of the museum will, in its own +good time, make this a pleasure instead of a pain. The specimens, the +_most important to the student_, are placed in a low, dark corridor. Not +a glimmer of light can be obtained on some of the cases, which also are +upright, and placed so closely together that on attempting to see the +topmost specimen on one side the unfortunate student literally bangs her +head into the glass of the next one. A gentle complaint at the +Directors' office concerning the difficulty brought forth the +astonishing information that there was no room at their disposal, but +that in good time better light might be found. As these cases have +been in identically the same place for the past fifteen years, one hopes +that the "good time" may come before one becomes a "spectacled +pantaloon" with no desire to see the wonders of that Palace of Art. + +[Illustration: POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Style Louis XV. Eighteenth Century + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +This little protest is made in the hope that the "Lords of the +Committee" may possibly have their attention drawn to what amongst the +lace-lovers and students in this country is a "standing grievance." + +It is almost impossible, even from the best of photographic +illustrations, to learn all the intricacies of identification. The +photographs clearly show style, but it needs specimens of the actual +lace to show method of working. From the illustrations in this book, +specially selected from the South Kensington Collection, and from +specimens in my own collection, every variety of style may be easily +understood, as they have been particularly selected to show each point +of difference. Commencing with the earliest form of lacework--_i.e._, +"cutworke"--nothing will better show this than the "Sampler" specimen, +which, half way down, shows two rows entirely typical of this kind of +early lace-making--for such it is. A little lower, examples of drawn +threadwork are seen, while the upper portion illustrates satin stitch +patterns, which more properly belong to embroidery. + +The ancient collar from the South Kensington Collection, page 149, shows +some of the finest developments of cutwork, when the foundation of linen +was entirely dispensed with. The work is exceedingly fine, the threads +being no coarser, indeed in many cases less so, than the fine linen it +adorns. This is known as Reticella, or "punto in aria." The last name +is applicable to all the laces of Venice which succeeded Reticella, and +means lace literally made out of nothing or without any building +foundation. + +The specimen is still of the same class, but where before the design was +simple geometric square and pointed as in all the early lace, it now +takes on the lovely flowing scroll of the Renaissance that marks the +latter half of the seventeenth century. + +The same grand styles may be noted all through the great period of +Italian Needlepoint lace. It will be seen in a lesser degree in the +Guipure laces of Milan and Genoa, but here the cramping influence of the +Flemish school shows itself distinctly. + +[Illustration: ITALIAN ECCLESIASTICAL LACE.] + +[Illustration: FLEMISH OR GENOESE ECCLESIASTICAL LACE. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +The same bold lines may be noted in the early Needlepoint lace of +France, which had not then become sufficiently sure of her capacity to +develop a style of her own, and all show the Renaissance spirit. +Afterwards when the superb Point de France was at its height of +manufacture along with grand outline and exquisite handicraft, the +influence of the mighty monarch Louis XIV. asserted itself and although +the lace itself commands unbounded admiration, fantastic little notions, +symbolical and naturalistic, showed itself--as an illustration page 75: +little figures representing "the Indian," "canopied crown over a sealed +lady," trees growing all manner of bizarre fruit and flowers, all +symbolical of Louis the Magnificent's unbounded power and sway. In the +South Kensington Museum there is a still finer specimen, which has +not yet been photographed, I believe--a magnificent flounce, about +eighteen inches wide (really two boot top pieces joined), of what is +known as pseudo-Oriental character, which shows amongst the usual +exquisite scrolling no less than seven different figures on each +piece--viz., an Indian, a violinist in dress of Louis XIV. period, a +lady riding on a bird, two other ladies, one with a pet dog and the +other a parrot, a lady violinist, and another lady seated before a +toilet-table. These little figures are not more than three-quarters of +an inch high, but are worked with such minuteness that even the tiny +features are shown. This fantastic adoption of the human figure was +copied in Italy and Flanders. The finest specimens of Point d'Angleterre +(Brussels) show the same designs; and it may broadly be stated that all +lace with figures is of the Louis XIV. period, and over two hundred +years old. + +Succeeding this period came the dainty elegance of the French laces, +when the workers of Alençon and Argentan had developed a purely French +style. Note the Point d'Alençon, illustration page 83, where the +characteristics of the period are fully shown. The illustration shows a +mixed lace, which only recently has been acknowledged by the South +Kensington people as Point d'Argentan. Along with the typical Argentan +ground of the upper portion is the fine Alençon mesh and varied jours of +the border. This also is Louis XIV. style. The lappet shown next is +exceedingly instructive, as till quite lately the people who professed +to understand lace agreed to call this Genoese, although it was quite +unlike anything else made there. This lappet was so labelled at South +Kensington, but now is admittedly Argentella (or little Argentan). It is +remarkably like Alençon, being of the same period, the only points of +difference being that the design is not outlined with a raised Cordonnet +(though in different places of the design a raised and purled Cordonnet +is often stitched on it) and the special ground (partridge eye) which is +agreed to denote "Argentella" lace--page 83. It is sometimes called the +may-flower ground, but this is somewhat misleading as that design occurs +in other laces. The only other great style is that of Flanders, which at +its earliest period had received no influence from the Renaissance that +had seized the southern countries of Europe and was still in the grip of +mediæval art. It was not until Italian influence permeated France that +Flemish lace perceptibly altered in character. + +These are to all intents and purposes the three great styles of lace. +England had no style: she copied Flemish, Brussels, and Mechlin laces. +Ireland, on the contrary, copied Italian in her Irish crotchet and +Carrick-ma-cross (in style only, but not workmanship), and adapted Lille +and Mechlin and Brussels and Buckingham in her Limerick lace. + +The student must next make herself familiar with the methods pursued by +the old lace-workers, and here the difficulty commences. All lace is +either Needlepoint, pillow-made, or machine-made. _Needlepoint_ explains +itself. Every thread of it is made with a needle on a parchment pattern, +and only two stitches are used, buttonhole and a double-loop which is +really a buttonhole stitch. + +[Illustration: BRUSSELS LAPPET. + +Nineteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +This can be clearly understood by referring to Charts Nos. I. and II., +where the _two Brussels grounds_ are shown. The Needlepoint ground, No. +I., is formed by a buttonhole stitch, which loops over again before +taking the next. The pillow-made ground, No. II., shows the threads +plaited or twisted together to form a hexagonal or a diamond-shaped +network. This is all the difference between needle-made and pillow-made +lace, and in itself helps to identify in many instances its country and +period when it was produced. All the early Italian laces were +Needlepoint, and all the early French laces were the same. All the +Flemish laces (including Brussels) were pillow-made, and mixed laces in +any of these countries are of later make. Italy adapted the Flemish +pillow-lace, and produced Genoese and Milanese guipures, in addition to +the coarse imitation of Reticella which she now made by plaiting threads +on the pillow. Brussels adopted the needle-made motifs and grounds of +Italy, and produced perhaps her finest lace, weaving her beautiful +designs and outlines on the pillow, and afterwards filling the spaces +with needle-made jours and brides, as in Point d'Angleterre. + +A study of Chart II. will show the different style of grounds or réseaux +of both Needlepoint and pillow-made lace, the buttonhole grounds being +either of "brides" with or without picots, or buttonhole loops, as in +Brussels, and Alençon (with a straight thread whipping across to +strengthen the ground), loops buttonholed over all as in Argentan, or +made of tiny worked hexagons with separate buttonholed threads around +them as in Argentella. The pillow-made grounds are made of two plaited +or twisted threads, except in the case of Valenciennes, when it is made +of four threads throughout (hence its durability). In Brussels, it will +be noted, the threads are twisted twice to commence the mesh. These meet +two other threads, and are plaited four times, dividing into two again, +and performing the same twist, the whole making a hexagon rather longer +than round. Mechlin has precisely the same ground, only that the threads +are plaited _twice_ instead of four times, as in Brussels, making the +hexagon roundish instead of long. + +The ground of Lille lace is of exactly the same shape as Valenciennes, +but is composed of two threads twisted loosely twice each side of the +diamond, and that of Valenciennes being made of four threads plaited. + +With the aid of these little charts, a remembrance of the various styles +and a few actual specimens of lace, and _a powerful magnifying glass_, +it is not beyond the power of any reader of this little book to become +expert in the identification of old lace. + +[Illustration: REAL "POINT DE GAZE" (NEEDLE-MADE GROUND). + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XIV + +SALE PRICES + + + + +XIV + +SALE PRICES + + +Lace is such an article of luxury, and, as a rule, only belonging to the +wealthiest class, that it seldom or ever comes into the open market. In +1907 two collections were dispersed at Christie's--those of Mrs. +Massey-Mainwaring and Mrs. Lewis Hill. + +The most costly laces are the Venetian Points, some of the fine Rose +Points being priceless. It is so fragile that little of it remains, and +the smallest piece is eagerly snapped up by collectors. + + +In 1904 at Christie's lace sold for the following prices-- + + £ +A 58-inch length of 24-ins. deep Point de Venise 600 + +A 4-yards length of Rose Point, 11 inches deep 420 + + +The same year-- + + £ +4 yards of Point d'Argentan, 25 inches deep 460 + +44 inches Point d'Alençon, 17 inches deep 43 + +2-1/2 yards Point d'Alençon, 14 inches deep 46 + + +In 1907, March 11, _Massey-Mainwaring Sale_ at Christie's-- + + sold for + £ s. d. +1-1/2 yards Venetian Gros Point, 8 inches deep 16 16 0 + +5 yards length of Reticella, 7-1/2 inches +deep 33 12 0 + +4 short lengths 42 0 0 + +7 pieces of Point d'Alençon 21 0 0 + +4 yards narrow Point d'Argentan 15 15 0 + +3 pairs Point d'Argentan lappets 15 15 0 + +30 yards narrow Mechlin in odd lengths 21 0 0 + + +April 15th, the _Lewis-Hill Sale_ at Christie's:-- + + sold for + £ s. d. +4 yards Venetian Point, 15-1/2 inches deep 68 5 0 + +4 " " " 8-1/2 " " 52 10 0 + +3 yards Spanish Point, 6-1/2 inches deep 73 10 0 + +An Old Brussels scarf in two pieces 10 10 0 + +6 yards Brussels applique 23 10 0 + +A Point Gaze parasol-cover 6 16 0 + +A Brussels flounce 12 1 6 + +3 yards Honiton flounce, 17 inches deep 69 6 0 + +Another similar 69 6 0 + +6 yards Honiton lace in three pieces 24 3 0 + +An old lace coverlet 25 4 0 + +Another ditto 26 5 0 + +A lace altar-frontal 21 1 0 + +With the exception of the Honiton flounces, which sold beyond their +market value, all the above pieces were bought by London lace dealers! + +The famous collection of the late Mrs. Hailstone was sold in 1909. This +lady had for many years been known as a lace collector, and the sale of +her effects was eagerly anticipated. The result was extremely +interesting to the collectors, as Mrs. Hailstone had collected specimen +lengths of almost every known lace. No huge prices obtained, but the +sale may be regarded as representative, and the prices quoted as being +open-market value. + + £ s. d. +A set of bed-hangings, forming six curtains, +made of Italian lace and linen 40 0 0 + +A large portière curtain of Italian lacis-work 10 10 0 + +A Point d'Alençon fichu 30 0 0 + +" " " cravat end, a pair of sleeves, +one odd piece 18 0 0 + +A pair of Argentan lappets and six yards lace 12 0 0 + +A panel fine raised Venetian Point, 22 inches +wide, 28 inches long 24 0 0 + +A Berthe, Point de Venise, 1 yard 120 inches, +12 inches deep 25 0 0 + +A Point de Venise Berthe 36 0 0 + +A 1 yard 13 inches x 7 inches panel Venetian lace 50 0 0 + +Two specimen pieces, 3-1/4 inches, all of +Point de Venise à réseau 14 10 0 + +A Buckinghamshire collar, sleeves, and pieces 5 5 0 + +A specimen of old Honiton, baby's cap, bodice, +and handkerchief 3 5 0 + +An old Honiton baby's robe, said to have belonged +to Princess Charlotte 15 10 0 + +Seven volumes of lace specimens of old and modern +lace 35 0 0 + +In December, 1910, probably the most valuable collection ever placed +upon the market was dispersed at Messrs. Christie's. The late Sir +William Abdy Bt., had for many years devoted his time and money to the +collection of valuable lace, such as now can only be seen in the great +national collections. The prices obtained are significant of the huge +sums which must be paid to obtain wearable pieces of valuable lace such +as skirt lengths, 3- or 4-yard lengths of deep flouncings, shawls, +coverlets, aprons, &c. + + £ s. d. + +A fine Point d'Alençon skirt, 2-1/2 yards, +44 inches deep 160 0 0 + +A fine Point d'Alençon scarf, 2 yards +9 inches × 10 inches deep 72 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan Berthe, 9-1/2 inches deep 39 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 6 yards 30 +inches × 5-1/2 inches deep 140 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 2 yards 26 +inches long × 25 inches deep 210 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 28 +inches long × 24 inches deep 310 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 35 +inches long × 25 inches deep 431 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 16 +inches long × 24-1/2 inches deep 290 0 0 + +An Italian gold and thread lace flounce, +4 yards long, 29 inches deep 740 0 0 + +A length of Italian Rose Point, 4 yards +15 inches long, 3 inches deep 70 0 0 + +An old Italian Rose Point flounce, 3 +yards 31 inches long, 17-1/2 inches deep 660 0 0 + +An old Italian Rose Point square, 31 +inches × 34 inches 180 0 0 + +An old Italian Rose Point flounce, 3 +yards 19 inches long, 7-1/2 inches deep 520 0 0 + +An old Italian Rose Point panel, 34 +inches × 9 inches 95 0 0 + +A Point de Venise lappet à réseau, 46 +inches long, 5-1/4 inches wide 22 0 0 + +Point de Venise trimming, 8 yards long +× 4 inches deep 65 0 0 + +A piece of flat Venetian insertion, 4 +yards × 3-3/4 inches deep 92 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards long × 5 +inches deep 200 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 3 yards 31 inches +long × 22 inches deep 600 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 7 inches +long × 24 inches deep 540 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 3 yards 32 inches +long × 15 inches deep 560 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 11 inches +long × 18 inches deep, and a pair of +sleeves en suite 650 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 3 inches +long × 11-1/2 inches deep 510 0 0 + +A raised Point de Venise square, 1 yard +24 inches long × 1 yard 6 inches wide 450 0 0 + +An Old Brussels apron, 41 inches wide, +37 inches deep 145 0 0 + +A specimen piece of early Valenciennes, +2 yards long × 7 inches deep 42 0 0 + + +The following prices have been given by the South Kensington authorities +for specimens shown:-- + + £ s. d. + +A Venetian Point altar-frontal, 8 × 3 feet 350 0 0 + +A Venetian chasuble, stole, maniple, +and chalice veil 200 0 0 + +A 2 yards × 5/8 yard Venetian flounce 125 0 0 + +A Gros Point collar 21 0 0 + +A Brussels lappet 23 0 0 + +A drawn-thread jacket 10 10 0 + +Linen cutwork tunic 20 0 0 + +[Illustration: EGYPTIAN EMBROIDERY. + +Found in a tomb at Thebes.] + + + + +CHATS ON NEEDLEWORK + + + + +I + +OLD ENGLISH EMBROIDERY + + Needlework pioneer art--Neolithic remains--Earliest known + English specimens--Bayeux tapestry. + + +While the subject of lace-making has been treated as almost +cosmopolitan, that of embroidery, in this volume, must be regarded as +purely national! I purposely refrain from introducing the embroideries +of other countries, other than mentioning the ancient civilisations +which shared the initial attempts to decorate garments, hangings, &c. +(of which we really know very little), and shall confine myself to the +needlework of this country, more especially as it is the one art and +craft of which England may be unfeignedly proud. It is assumed that +needlecraft was the pioneer art of the whole world, that the early +attempts to decorate textiles by embroideries of coloured silks, and the +elaborate use of gold and silver threadwork, first suggested painting, +sculpture, and goldsmith's work. Certainly early Egyptian paintings +imitated embroideries, and we have good ground for supposing that +stained glass was a direct copy of the old ecclesiastical figures or +ancient church vestments. The Neolithic remains found in Britain show +that at a very early period the art of making linen-cloth was +understood. Fragments of cloth, both of linen and wool, have been +discovered in a British barrow in Yorkshire, and early bone needles +found at different parts of the country are plentiful in our museums. +There is no doubt that we owe much of our civilisation to the visit of +the Phoenicians, those strange people, who appear to have carried all +the arts and crafts of ancient Babylon and Assyria to the wonder isles +of the Greek Archipelago, to Egypt, to Southern Spain, and to Cornwall +and Devonshire. These people, dwelling on the maritime border of +Palestine, were the great traders of their age, and while coming to this +country (then in a state of wildest barbarism) for tin left in exchange +a knowledge of the arts and appliances of civilisation hitherto not +understood. The Roman Invasion (45 B.C.) brought not only knowledge of +craftsmanship but also Christianity. St. Augustine, to whom the +conversion of the Britains is credited, carried with him a banner +embroidered with the image of Christ. After the Romans had left the +country, and it had become invaded by the Celts and the Danes, and had +again been taken possession of by the Saxons, a period of not only rest +but advancement arrived, and we see early in the seventh century the +country prosperous and settled. Aldhelm, Bishop of Sherborne, wrote a +poem in which he speaks of the tapestry-weaving and the embroidery which +the women of England occupied their lives. + +[Illustration: A LENGTH OF THE FAMOUS BAYEUX TAPESTRY.] + +The earliest specimen of embroidery known to have been executed in +England is that of the stole and maniple of St. Cuthbert, which is now +treasured at Durham Cathedral. These were worked by Aelfled, the Queen +of Edward the Elder, Alfred the Great's son. She worked them for Bishop +Fridhestan in 905 A.D. Her son Athelstan, after her death, visited the +shrine of St. Cuthbert, at Chester-le-street, and in an inventory of the +rich gifts which he left there, there is recorded "one stole with a +maniple," amongst other articles. These very embroideries were removed +from the actual body of St. Cuthbert in 1827. They are described by an +eyewitness as being "of woven gold, with spaces left vacant for +needlework embroideries." Exquisitely embroidered figures are in niches +or clouds. The whole effect is described as being that of a fine +illuminated MS. of the ninth century, and indescribably beautiful. +Another great prelate, St. Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, designed +embroideries for the execution of pious ladies of his diocese (924 A.D.). + +Emma, Queen of Ethelred the Unready, and afterwards of Canute, designed +and embroidered many church vestments and altar-cloths, and Editha, wife +of Edward the Confessor, embroidered the King's coronation mantle. + +The great and monumental Bayeux tapestry--which is miscalled, as it is +_embroidery_--was the work of Queen Matilda, who, like Penelope, wove +the mighty deeds of her husband and king in an immense embroidery. This +piece of needlecraft comes upon us as a shock, rather than an +admiration, after the exquisite embroideries worked by and for the +Church. It is interesting, however, as a valuable historic "document," +showing the manners and customs of the time. The canvas is 227 feet long +and 20 inches wide, and shows events of English history from the +accession of Edward the Confessor to the defeat of Harold, at Hastings. +It is extremely crude; no attempt is made at shading, the figures being +worked in flat stitch in coloured wools, on linen canvas. Certainly it +is one of the quaintest and most primitive attempts of working pictures +by needlecraft. + +The evidence of the costumes, the armour, &c., are supposed to tell us +that this tapestry was worked many years after the Conquest, but it can +be traced by documentary evidence as having been seen in Bayeux +Cathedral as far back as 1476. In the time of Napoleon I. it was removed +from the cathedral and was actually used as a covering for a transport +waggon. Finally, however, it was exhibited in the Musée Napoleon, in +1803, and was afterwards returned to Bayeux. In 1840 it was restored and +relined, and is now in the Hôtel de Ville at Bayeux! + +[Illustration: KING HAROLD. + +(_From the Bayeux Tapestry._)] + + + + +II + +THE GREAT PERIOD OF EMBROIDERY + + + + +II + +THE GREAT PERIOD OF EMBROIDERY + + "Opus Anglicanum"--The Worcester fragments--St. + Benedict--Legend of Pope Innocent--The "Jesse" cope--The "Syon" + cope. + + +The great period of English embroidery is supposed to have been from the +twelfth to the thirteenth century. Very little remains to show this, +except a few fragments of vestments from the tombs of the bishops dating +from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and other data obtained from +various foreign inventories of later date referring to the use of "Opus +Anglicanum." Some portion of the Worcester fragments may be seen in the +South Kensington Museum, and can only be described as being so perfect +in workmanship, colour, and style as even at this day to be more like a +magnificent piece of goldsmith's work than that of needlecraft. The +background is apparently one mass of thread of fine gold worked in and +out of a silken mesh, the embroidery appearing just as clear and neat in +manipulation as an illumination. The coloured photographs, which may be +seen in the same room, of the stole and maniple of St. Cuthbert are of +precisely the same work. Judging from these, and the embroidered orphrey +which the authorities bought from the Hockon Collection for £119 1s. +10d. and which is only 4 feet 8 inches long, there is no doubt that this +was, _par excellence_, the finest period. The work can only be described +as being like an old Italian painting on a golden ground. We see +precisely such design and colouring in ancient paintings for altars as +in the old Italian Triptychs. This style was carried out as literally as +possible. Even the defects, if so they may be called, are there, and a +slight topheaviness of the figures serves but to accentuate the +likeness. + +There is a legend that during the times of the Danish incursions St. +Benedict travelled backwards and forwards through France and Italy, and +brought with him during his _seven_ journeys artificers in _glass_ and +_stone_, besides costly books and copies of the Scriptures. The chief +end and aim of monastic life, both of monk and nun, in those early days +was to embroider, paint, and illuminate their sacred books, vestments, +and edifices with what was to them a newly-inspired faith. + +Dr. Rock, in his "Church of Our Fathers," says that from the twelfth +century to the time of Henry VIII. that only the best materials that +could be found in our country or that of other lands were employed, and +that the art that was used on them was the best that could be learnt or +given. The original fabrics often came from Byzantium or were of +Saracenic origin. + +[Illustration: FROM THE "JESSE" COPE (_South Kensington Museum_). + +English, early Fourteenth Century.] + +The story of Pope Innocent III., who, seeing certain vestments and +orphreys, and being informed that they were English, said, "Surely +England must be a garden of delight!" must be quoted to show how English +work was appreciated in those early days. + +The choicest example in this country of this glorious period of English +embroidery is the famous Syon cope, which is supposed to rank as the +most magnificent garment belonging to the Church. It may be regarded as +a typical example of real English work, the "Opus Anglicanum" or +"Anglicum," which, although used for other purposes, such as +altar-cloths and altar-frontals, found apparently its fullest scope in +these large semicircular mantles. + +Amongst the many copes treasured at South Kensington there are none, +amidst all their splendour, as fine as this, although the fragment of +the "Jesse" cope runs it very closely. There are many copes of this +period in different parts of the Continent--the Daroca Cope at Madrid, +one at Ascagni, another at Bologna, at St. Bertrand-de-Comminges, at +"St. John Lateran" at Rome, at Pienza and Toleda, and a fragment of one +with the famous altar-frontal at Steeple Aston. These are all assumed to +be of "Opus Anglicanum," and they may be described as being technically +perfect, the stitches being of fine small tambour stitch, beautifully +even, and the draperies exquisitely shaded. + +The illustration showing the Syon Cope requires some little explanation. +It is wrought on linen, embroidered all over with gold and silver thread +and coloured silk. It is 9 feet 7 inches long, 4 feet 8 inches wide. +The whole of the cope except the border is covered with interlacing +quatrefoils outlined in gold. The ground of these quatrefoils is covered +with red silk and the spaces between them with green silk. Each +quatrefoil is filled with scenes from the life of Christ, the Virgin, +and figures of St. Michael and of the Apostles. On the green spaces are +worked figures of six-winged angels standing on whorls. The chief place +on the quatrefoils is given to the crucifixion, where the body of the +Saviour is worked in silver and cloth of gold. The Virgin, arrayed in +green tunic and golden mantle, is on one side and St. John, in gold, on +the other. Above the quatrefoil is another representing the Redeemer +seated on a cushioned throne with the Virgin, and below another +representing St. Michael overcoming Satan. Other quatrefoils show +"Christ appearing to St. Mary Magdalen," "The Burial of the Virgin," +"The Coronation of the Virgin," "The Death of the Virgin with the +Apostles surrounding her," "The Incredulity of St. Thomas," "St. Simon," +"St. Bartholomew," "St. Peter," "St. Paul," "St. Thomas," "St. Andrew," +and "St. James." Portions of four other Apostles may be seen, but at +some period the cope has been cut down. In its original state the cope +showed the twelve Apostles. The lower portion has been cut away and +reshaped, and round this is an edging apparently made out of a stole and +maniple which point to a later date, as they are worked chiefly in +cross-stitch. On the orphrey are emblazoned the arms of Warwick, Castile +and Leon, Ferrars, Geneville Everard, the badge of the Knights +Templars, Clifford, Spencer, Lindsay, Le Botelier, Sheldon, Monteney of +Essex, Champernoun, Everard, Tyddeswall Grandeson, Fitz Alan, Hampden, +Percy, Clanvowe, Ribbesford, Bygod, Roger de Mortimer, Grove, B. +Bassingburn, and many others not recognisable. These coats of arms, it +is suggested, belonged to the noble dames who worked the border. The +angels which fill the intervening spaces are of the six-winged +varieties, each standing on whorls or wheels. + +[Illustration: THE "SYON" COPE. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +The cope is worked in a fine tambour or chain stitch principally. All +the faces, bodies, and draperies are composed of this. A specially +noticeable point is that the faces are worked spirally, beginning in the +centre of the cheek and being worked round and round, conforming with +the muscles of the face. The garments are worked according to the hang +of the drapery, very fine effects being obtained. After the work has +been completed a hot iron something like a little iron rod with a +bulbous end has been pressed into the cheeks, under the throat, and in +different parts of the nude body. Occasionally, but seldom, the same +device may be seen in the drapery. All the work is exquisitely fine and +perfectly even. The groundwork of the quatrefoils is of gold-laid or +"couch" work, as is also that of the armorial bearings. + +The name "Syon" is somewhat misleading, as the Cope was not made here, +but came into the hands of the Bridgettine nuns in 1414, when Henry V. +founded the convent of "Syon" at Isleworth. Its origin and date will +ever be a matter of conjecture, but Dr. Rock infers that Coventry may +have been the place of its origin. Taking Coventry as a centre with a +small radius, several of the great feudal houses the arms of which are +on the border of the cope may be found, and Dr. Rock further supposes +that Eleanor, widow of Edward the First, may have become a sister of the +fraternity unknown, as her arms, Castile and Leon, are on it. "The whole +must have taken long in working, and the probability is that it was +embroidered by nuns of some convent which stood on or near Coventry." +However this may be, it is certain that this splendid piece of English +work came into the hands, by some means, of the nuns of Syon, and after +remaining with them at Isleworth till Elizabeth's time, it was carried +by them through Flanders, France, and Portugal. They remained at the +latter place till the same persecution which dispersed the famous +Spanish Point lace over the length and breadth of the Continent, and +about eighty years ago it was brought back to England, and was given by +the remaining members of the Order to the Earl of Shrewsbury. After +further vicissitudes of a varied character it was bought by the South +Kensington Museum for £110, and now sheds the glory of its golden +threads in a dark transept unnoticed except by the student. + + + + +III + +ECCLESIASTICAL EMBROIDERIES AND VESTMENTS + + +[Illustration: HALF OF THE STEEPLE ASTON ALTAR FRONTAL. + +English, Fourteenth Century.] + + + + +III + +ECCLESIASTICAL EMBROIDERIES AND VESTMENTS + + The Pierpont Morgan purchase--The Steeple Aston + Altar-frontal--The "Nevil" Altar-frontal at S. K. M.--City + palls--Diagram of vestments. + + +Other copes of the same period are in the Madrid Museum, two copes at +Bologna, and the "Ascoli" cope recently purchased by Mr. J. Pierpont +Morgan and generously returned by him. Some cushions from Catworth +Church, Huntingdon, now at the South Kensington Museum, were probably +cut from copes, and bought by permission of the Bishop of Ely for £27. A +long band of red velvet at South Kensington Museum embroidered with gold +and silver and coloured silk has evidently been made from the "Apparels" +of an alb. It is in two pieces, each piece depicting five scenes divided +by broad arches. The first five are from the life of the Virgin, and +are: "The Angel appearing to Anna," "The Meeting of Anna and Joachim," +"Birth of the Virgin," "Presentation of the Virgin," "Education of the +Virgin." In the second piece are: "The Annunciation," "The Salutation," +"The Nativity," "The Angel appearing to the Shepherds," and the +"Journey of the Magi." + +Another piece of similar work is the altar-frontal of Steeple Aston, +which was originally a cope, and the cope now at Stonyhurst College, +originally belonging to Westminster Cathedral. It is made of one +seamless piece of gold tissue. + +During this great period of English embroidery certain characteristics +along with its superb workmanship must be noticed. The earlier the work +the finer the modelling of the figures. In the figures of the St. +Cuthbert and the Worcester fragments the proportions of the figures are +exquisite; at a later date, while the work is just as excellent, the +figures become unnatural, the heads being unduly large, the eyes +staring, and the perspective entirely out of drawing. Until the +fourteenth century this comes so gradually as to be scarcely noted; but +after and through the fifteenth century this becomes so marked as to be +almost grotesque, and only the genuine religious fervour with which +these poor remnants have been worked prevents many of them being +ridiculous. The faces gradually show less careful drawing and working, +and the figures become squat and topheavy. The emblems of the saints are +often omitted. + +[Illustration: THE "NEVIL" ALTAR FRONTAL. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +This decline in the embroiderer's art is specially noticeable in an +extraordinary panel to be seen at South Kensington Museum, where an +altar-frontal of stamped crimson velvet is appliqued in groups of +figures in gold, silver, and silks. In the middle is the Crucifixion, +with the Virgin and St. John standing on a strip covered with flowers. +On the left is Ralph Nevil, fourth Earl of Westmoreland, 1523, kneeling, +and behind him his seven sons. On the right is Lady Catherine Stafford, +his wife, also kneeling, and behind her kneel her thirteen daughters. +The frontal cost the museum £50 and is well worth it as an historical +document. Other important embroideries of the period to be found in +England are at Cirencester Cathedral, Ely Cathedral, Salisbury and +Carlisle Cathedrals, Chipping Norton and Little Dean in Gloucestershire, +East Langdon in Kent, Buckland and Stourton in Worcester, Littleworth in +Leicestershire, Lynn in Norfolk, and the Parish Church at Warrington. + +Many of the palls belonging to the great city companies belong to this +date. The Saddlers' Company's pall is of crimson velvet embroidered with +angels surrounding "I.H.S.," and arms of the Company. The Fishmongers' +Pall, made at the end of the fifteenth century, has at one end the +figure of St. Peter (the patron saint of fishermen) enthroned, and +angels on either side, and at the other end St. Peter receiving the keys +from our Lord. The Vintners' Pall is made of Italian velvet and cloth of +gold and embroidered with St. Martin of Tours. + +Religious influence characterised the embroideries of England +practically from the ninth to the sixteenth centuries. Practically all +needlework prior to 1600 is entirely ecclesiastical, and from its +limited range in choice of subjects barely does justice to the fine work +this period produced. + +Dr. Rock says that "few persons of the present day have the faintest +idea of the labour, the money, the time, often bestowed on old +embroideries which had been designed by the hands of men and women each +in their own craft the best and ablest of the day." + +We do not know the length of time these ancient vestments occupied in +the making, but twenty-six years is stated to be the period of making +the vestments for the Church of San Giovanni, in Florence. This is all +worked in close stitches similar to our English work. + + +_Ancient Church Vestments._ + +The names of the ecclesiastical vestments are somewhat puzzling to those +of us who do not belong to the Romish Church, or even to the English +High Church. The vestments described are, we believe, in use in the +Romish churches now as in the early times when church embroidery was the +pleasure and the labour of all classes of English women. The +accompanying diagram will better illustrate the use of these vestments +than a page of writing. + + +[Illustration: ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS. + +1. Amice. +2. Orphreys. +3. Chasuble. +4. Sleeves of Alb. +5 and 9. Apparel of Alb. +6. Maniple. +7. Stole. +8. Alb. + +_From "A Guide to Ecclesiastical Law," by kind permission of Mr. Henry +Miller._] + + * * * * * + +The Alb is often trimmed handsomely with lace, the apparels are stitched +on to the front. The Stoles ought to have three crosses embroidered on +it and be 3 yards long. Over this comes the Chasuble, which is the +last garment the priest puts on before celebrating Mass. The Cope is a +huge semi-circular 10 ft. wide cape. The Maniple is a strip of +embroidery 3 ft. 4 in. long worn over the left wrist of the priest. + +[Illustration: ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS. + +English, Fifteenth or early Sixteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +IV + +TUDOR EMBROIDERY + + + + +IV + +TUDOR EMBROIDERY + + The influences of the Reformation--Queen Catherine of Aragon's + needlecraft--The gorgeous clothes of Henry VIII.--Field of the + Cloth of Gold--Queen Elizabeth's embroideries. + + +After the Reformation and the wholesale destruction of the cathedrals, +monasteries, and churches, the gentle dames of England found their +occupation gone. The priestly vestments, the sumptuous altar-cloths, and +gorgeous hangings were now needless. Those which had been the glory of +their owners, and the pictorial representations of Biblical life to the +uneducated masses of people, had been ruthlessly torn down and destroyed +for the sake of the gold to be found on them. As in the time immediately +preceding the French Revolution, costly embroideries were unpicked, and +the amount of gold and silver obtained from them became a source of +income and profit to their destroyers. + +Apart from her household, women had no other interests in those days, +unless we accept such anomalies as Lady Jane Grey, who was a marvel of +learning and wisdom. All their long leisure hours had been spent, not in +improving their minds, but in beautifying the churches with specimens of +their skill. Catherine of Aragon, one of the unfortunate queens of Henry +VIII., was a notable needlewoman, and spent much of her short, unhappy +time as Queen of England in embroidery. The lace-making of Northampton +is said to have been commenced by her during her period of retirement +after her divorce. The "Spanish stitch," which was known and used in +embroidery of that period, was introduced by her from her own country, +and many examples of her skill in embroidery are to be seen in the +British Museum and the various homes belonging to our old nobility. + +During the reign of Henry VIII. dress became very sumptuous, as the +contemporary pictures of the times show. Indeed, all the fervour and +feeling which ladies had worked in religious vestments now seemed to +find refuge in the over-elaboration of personal wear. Very little lace +was used, and that of only a primitive description, so that effect was +produced by embroidery in gold and silver threads and the use of pearls +and precious stones. The dress of the nobles in the time of Henry VIII. +was especially gorgeous, the coats being thickly padded and quilted with +gold bullion thread, costly jewels afterwards being sewn in the +lozenges. It is related that after his successful divorce King Henry +gave a banquet to celebrate his marriage to Anne Boleyn, and wore a coat +covered with the jewelled letters "H," and in the height of his +satisfaction allowed the ladies to cut or tear away the jewels as +souvenirs of his triumph over Wolsey and Catherine. It is said that he +was left in his underwear, so great was the competition for these +favours! Robes made of gold tissue, then called Cloth of Gold, were +used, and in Henry's meeting with Francis I. the English and French +armies vied with each other as to which should present a greater +magnificence. The name "the Field of the Cloth of Gold" remains as a +guarantee of its splendour. + +Under the more austere and religious rule of Queen Mary we might suppose +that ecclesiastical embroidery would have somewhat regained a foothold. +But the landmarks had been entirely swept away, and we have little to +record of the reign, except that Mary herself was a clever needlewoman +and worked much of her heartache, at the neglect of her Spanish husband, +into her needlework. Her jealousy of her sister Elizabeth caused the +latter to spend her life away from the pomps and ceremonies of the +Court, and she has left many records of her handiwork, some well +authenticated, as, for example, the two exquisite book-covers in the +British Museum. Queen Elizabeth cannot, however, be said to have been in +any way a patroness of the art of needlecraft. Her talent seems rather +to have been devoted to affairs of State--and her wardrobe! On her +death, at seventy years of age, she left over one thousand dresses, most +of which must have been a cruel weight, so overburdened were they with +stiff bullion and trimmed with large pearls and jewels. Her dresses were +literally diapered with gold and silver "gimps" inset with heavier +stones, but little real embroidery is shown. + +Mary Queen of Scots, on the contrary, was a born needlewoman. During her +married life in France she learned the gentle arts of embroidery and +lace-making, accomplishments which, as in many humbler women's lives, +have served their owners in good stead in times of loneliness and +trouble. The Duke of Devonshire possesses specimens of Queen Mary's +skill, worked during the long, dreary days of her imprisonment at +Fotheringay. It is said that Queen Elizabeth was not above helping +herself to the wardrobe and laces that the unfortunate Queen of Scotland +brought with her from France. + +Much embroidery must have been worked for the adornment of the house +after the Reformation, but beyond an occasional old inventory nothing is +left to show it. After the Reformation greater luxury in living +obtained, and instead of the clean or rush-strewn floors some kind of +floor-covering was used. Furniture became much more ornamental, and the +use of hangings for domestic purposes was common. Not a thread of these +hand-worked hangings remain, but we have the immense and immediate use +of tapestry, which first became a manufacture of England in the reign of +Henry VIII. It is easy to conceive that English women would readily +seize upon the idea supplied in tapestry and adapt its designs to that +of embroidery. It is certain that hangings for the old four-post beds +were embroidered, as in the inventory of Wolsey's great palace at +Hampton Court there is mention of 230 bed-hangings of English +embroidery. Nothing of this remains, so that its style is simply +conjectural; and we can only suppose these hangings to have been +replicas of the magnificent velvet and satin hangings, covered with laid +or couched gold and silver threads, such as Catherine of Aragon would +bring with her from Spain. This also would account for their absolute +disappearance. The value of the gold and silver in embroidery has always +been a fertile source of wealth to the destroyer of ancient fabrics, +while many embroideries worked only in silks have escaped this +vandalism. + + + + +V + +EARLY NEEDLEWORK PICTURES AND ACCESSORIES + + +[Illustration: EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE. + +Late Sixteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +V + +EARLY NEEDLEWORK PICTURES AND ACCESSORIES + + "Petit point"--old list of stitches--Stuart + bags--Gloves--Shoes--Caps. + + +Towards the end of James I.'s reign it is supposed that the earliest +needlework pictures appeared. They were obviously literal copies of the +tapestries which had now become of general use in the homes of the +wealthy, being worked in what is known as "petit point," or "little +stitch." This stitch was worked on canvas of very close quality, with +fine silk thread, one stitch only being taken over the junction of the +warp and the weft of the canvas instead of the "cross stitch" of later +days. Very few of these specimens are left of an early date. A panel, +measuring 30 inches by 16 inches, in perfect condition, and dated 1601, +was sold at Christie's Rooms this year for £115. The purchaser, Mr. +Stoner, of King Street, sold it next day at a very considerable profit. + +At this period the workers of these pictures did not draw upon Biblical +subjects for their inspiration (with great advantage to the picture, it +may be stated). The subjects were either fanciful adaptations from real +life, with the little people dressed in contemporary costume, or dainty +little mythological subjects, such as the "Judgment of Paris," "Corydon +wooing Phyllis," with most absurd little castles of Tudor construction +in impossible landscapes, where the limpid stream meandered down +fairy-like hills into a shining lake, which held dolphins under the +water and water-fowl above it. The illustration depicts such a specimen, +and shows one of these tiny pictures worked in no less than ten +different stitches of lacework, in addition to the usual petit point. +The number of these stitches is legion. In the reign of Charles I., John +Taylor, the water-poet, wrote in 1640: + + "For tent worke, raised worke, first worke, laid worke, net worke, + Most curious purl, or rare Italian cut worke, + Fire, ferne stitch, finny stitch, new stitch, chain stitch, + Brave bred stitch, fisher stitch, Irish stitch, and Queen stitch, + The Spanish stitch, Rosemary stitch, and mowle stitch, + The smarting whip stitch, back stitch, and cross stitch; + All these are good, and this we must allow, + And they are everywhere in practice now." + +[Illustration: VERY EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +These are not _all_ the stitches in vogue during the first era of +needlework pictures. A single glance at one of the early specimens, +though it may not _charm_, fills one with amazement at the amount of +toil, ingenuity, patience, and downright _love_ for the work the ancient +needlewoman must have possessed. Not only pictures, however, were +made in petit point. Many dainty little accessories of the toilet gave +scope to the delicate fancy and nimble fingers of the ladies who had +found solace from the cessation of their labours for the priesthood in +making dainty little handbags and other pretty articles, each a marvel +of minute handicraft. One bag in my possession measures only four inches +square, and is worked on fine canvas, about forty threads to the square +inch, the design being the favourite Tudor rose, each petal worked in +lace stitch, and raised from the centre which is made of knots worked +with golden hair, flat green leaves exquisitely shaded, and a charming +bit of the worker's skill in the shape of a pea's pod, open and raised, +showing the tiny little peas in a row. An exquisitely worked butterfly +with raised wings in lace stitch is on the other side. The grounding of +the whole is run with flat gold thread, making a "cloth of gold" ground, +strings made of similarly worked canvas, with gold thread and silk +tassels complete a bag fit for the Princess Golden Locks of our fairy +tales. This little bag cost the writer 5 guineas, and was cheap at the +price. The South Kensington Museum have several specimens, and although +many are very exquisite, there is not one quite so perfect in design nor +in such condition. Other little trifles made in similar style are the +embroidered gauntlets of the buff leather glove worn at the time. These +have become rarer than any other embroideries, as they were not merely +for ornament but for actual wear. Four or five of these gauntlet gloves +are in the South Kensington Collection, but are of a later date than +the "petit point" period. + +The use of gloves in England was not very general, we may infer, in the +earlier ages of embroidery. There are certain evidences, however, +showing that the glove was part of the priestly outfit, remains of +gloves having been found on the bones of Thomas à Becket when they were +transferred from the crypt of Canterbury Cathedral to the special shrine +prepared for them; and a crimson leather pair, bearing the sacred +monogram in embroidered gold, are preserved in the New College, Oxford, +belonging to the founder, William of Wykeham, who opened the college in +1386. + +It was not until the fourteenth century that the wearing of gloves +became general, and practically nothing remains to show what manner of +hand-covering was worn until the Tudor period. Henry VIII. was +exceptionally lavish and extravagant in the use of handsomely +embroidered gloves, and few of his portraits show him without a +sumptuous glove in one hand. He had gloves for all functions--like a +modern fashionable woman. A pair of hawking gloves belonging to him are +in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, and in South Kensington is one of a +pair presented by Henry to his friend and Councillor Sir Anthony Denny. +It is of buff, thin leather, with a white satin gauntlet, embroidered +with blue and red silk in applique work, decorated with seed-pearls and +spangles, and trimmed with gold lace. The Tudor rose, the crown, and the +lion are worked amidst a splendour of gold and pearls. + +[Illustration: A STUART GLOVE. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Queen Elizabeth must have inherited her love for gorgeous apparel along +with her strong personality and masterful spirit, as her expenditure for +gloves alone was proverbial. The favourite offering to her was a pair of +gloves, but she was not above accepting shoes, handkerchiefs, laces, and +even gowns from her faithful and admiring subjects. On her visit to +Oxford in 1578 she was presented by the Chancellor of the University +with a pair of perfumed gloves, embroidered with gold and set with +jewels, which cost the University sixty shillings, an immense sum in +those days. Other historic gloves are in the various museums of the +country, seldom or never coming into the open market. In the +Braikenridge Collection sold at Christie's in February of this year I +was able to secure one for £2 12s. 6d., immediately afterwards being +offered double the price for it. + +The gloves belonging to Charles I. and Queen Henrietta Maria were very +ornamental, and it is said that even Oliver Cromwell, with all his +austerity, was not proof against the fascination of the decorated glove. + +With Charles II. the embroidered gloves seem to have vanished along with +the stumpwork pictures, of which more anon. + +Dainty shoes were embroidered in those old times. These, being articles +of wear, like the gloves, are very rare. The same fine petit point work +is seen on them; seed-pearls and in-run gold threads adorn them, and +frequently the Tudor rose, in raised work, forms the shoe knot. Two +pairs in Lady Wolseley's Collection, sold in 1906, fetched six guineas, +and nine and a half guineas. Tiny pocket-books were covered with this +pretty work, and charming covers almost as fresh as when they were +worked are occasionally unearthed, made to hold the old-fashioned +housekeeping and cooking books. + +One wonders oftentime how many, and yet, alas! how few, specimens of +this old petit point work have been preserved. It is only during recent +years that the "cult of the antique" has been fashionable, and is also +becoming a source of income and profit to the many who indulge in its +quest. Only members of learned antiquarian societies or born reliquaries +troubled themselves to acquire ancient articles of historic interest +because they were _old_, and served to form the sequence in the fairy +tales of Time. Anything "old" was ruthlessly destroyed, as being either +past wear, shabby, or old-fashioned, and countless treasures, both in +ecclesiastical and secular art, have at all periods been recklessly +destroyed for the sake of their intrinsic value in gold or jewels. In +the early days of my life I was allowed to pick out the corals and +seed-pearls from an old Stuart needle picture "for a doll's necklace!" +the picture itself probably going into the "rag-bag" of the +mid-Victorian good housekeeper. + + + + +VI + +STUART CASKETS AND MIRRORS + + + + +VI + +STUART CASKETS AND MIRRORS + + Secret drawers and hidden receptacles--High prices in the + Salerooms. + + +Among the many treasures of this exquisite period of needlecraft are the +well-known Stuart caskets. Very interesting and valuable are these +charming boxes, many of them being in a fine state of preservation, +owing to their having been enclosed in either a wooden or leathern box +specially made to contain them. These queer little boxes are frequently +made in the shape of Noah's ark. The lid being raised, a fitted mirror +is disclosed. The mirror slides out, and a secret recess may be +discovered to hold letters. The front falls down, disclosing any number +of tiny drawers, each drawer being silk-lined and the front of it +embroidered. Here, again, we may look for secret drawers. Very seldom +does the drawer run to the width of the cabinet, but by removing every +drawer and carefully searching for springs or slides many a tiny recess +is disclosed, where costly jewels, and perhaps a love-gage, has reposed +safely from the sight of unworthy eyes. + +Every square inch of these caskets is covered with embroidery, sometimes +in canvas, worked with the usual scriptural or mythological design, and +in others with white satin, exquisitely embroidered with figures and +floral subjects. Those in best preservation have been covered with mica, +which has preserved both the colour and the fabric. The fittings are +generally of silver. On the few occasions when these boxes or caskets +come into the market high prices are realised. Messrs. Christie last +year obtained £40 for a good specimen. I have never seen one sold under +£30, and as much as £100 has been given. + +Another pretty fancy was to cover small trays, presumably for the work +or dressing table, with embroidery. Not many of these remain, the wear +of removing them from place to place having been too much for their +staying powers. One in my possession is a small hexagonal tray with +raised sides, embroidered in coloured silks in floral design, on what +was once white satin. It is by no means a thing of beauty now, but as a +specimen it is interesting, and "a poor thing, but mine own," which +covers a multitude of shortcomings in these old relics, fortunately. + +[Illustration: "STUART" MIRROR FRAME. + +(_Lady Wolseley's Collection._)] + +Far more frequently met with, though quite prohibitive in price, are the +Stuart embroidered mirrors, which easily command £80 to £100 in the +salerooms. They are generally set in a frame of oak, leaving five or six +inches (which would otherwise be covered with carving or veneer) for +the embroidery. The mirror itself is comparatively small, being only +a secondary consideration, and often little remains of it for its +original purpose, as the glass is blurred and the silvering gone. Many +of these mirrors have _bevelled_ glass, which, of course, is wrong. + +The mirror shown in the illustration is one recently belonging to +Viscountess Wolseley and sold by her, among other Stuart needlework +specimens, at Messrs. Puttick & Simpson's in 1906. This mirror sold for +£100. The figures represent Charles I. and Queen Henrietta Maria, one on +either side of the mirror. The figure at the top of the frame is +difficult to understand; whether she is an angel or a mere Court lady +must be left to conjecture. The rolling clouds and the blazing sun are +above her head, and a peacock, with tail displayed, is on one side and a +happy-looking stag on the other. Two royal residences adorn the topmost +panels on either side, with all their bravery of flying flags and +smoking chimneys, and the lion and the leopard occupy the lower panels. +The latter animal identifies the King and Queen, who might otherwise be +Charles II. and his consort, as after Charles I.'s time the leopard gave +place to the unicorn for some unexplained reason. Other typical little +Stuart animals and birds fill in the extra panels, such as the spotted +dog who chases a little hare who is never caught, and the gaily-coloured +parroquet and kingfisher, which no respectable Stuart picture would be +without. The caterpillar, the ladybird, and the snail are all _en +evidence_; and below is a real pond, covered with talc, and containing +fish and ducks, the banks being made of tiny branching coral beads and +tufted silk and bullion work. + +About this time, when Venetian lace came into fashionable use as an +adjunct to the exquisite Stuart dress, tiny coloured beads were imported +from Venice. The embroiderers at once seized upon them as a new and +possibly more lasting means of showing their pretty fancies in design. +Many delightful specimens of these beadwork pictures are preserved, the +colours, of course, being as fresh as yesterday. The ground was always +of white satin, now faded and discoloured with age, and often torn with +the heaviness of the beadwork design. They are scarcely so charming as +the all needlework pictures, but still are delightful and covetable +articles. The exigencies of the beadwork, however, lends a certain +stiffness and ungainliness to the figures. + + + + +VII + +EMBROIDERED BOOKS AND "BLACK WORK" + + +[Illustration: "STUART" BOOK COVER. + +(_British Museum._)] + + + + +VII + +EMBROIDERED BOOKS AND "BLACK WORK" + + Style and symbolism--Specimen in British Museum and Bodleian + Libraries--"Black work" + + +Among the many dainty examples of Tudor and Stuart needlework are to be +found the exquisitely embroidered book-covers which date from Queen +Elizabeth's girlhood until the time of Charles II. They were always of +diminutive size, and many stitches diversify their covering; oftentimes +they were liberally embroidered with seed-pearls, and in these instances +most frequently this fashion has been their salvation. A book somehow +always seems to be a more sacred thing than a picture, and the costly +little volumes which remain to show this dainty handicraft have +apparently always been used either for Church or private devotional +purposes. + +The designs of the book-covers almost always follow certain styles. +These are either heraldic, scriptural, symbolical, floral, or arabesque. + +The first-named variety usually belonged to royalty or one of the many +noble houses whose ladies busied themselves with fair needlework. The +shield, containing the coat of arms of the family, occupied the centre +of the book-cover, being formed in raised gold and silver guipure or +cord, and on the reverse the worker's initials frequently appear, with a +pretty border in gold and silver, to outline the edges. + +The scriptural book-covers are always worked on canvas in fine petit +point stitches. One in South Kensington Museum is larger than most of +these volumes, and has on one side Solomon in all his glory and on the +reverse Jacob and his ladder and King David. These canvas-covered books +appear to have suffered most from the wear and tear of time, and very +few remain. + +The symbolical covers are few, and mostly uninteresting. They are worked +as a rule on silk and satin in loose satin stitches, which have suffered +much from friction. The sacred monogram is often the centre of the +device. A favourite design was adorning the back of the books with +portraits of the martyred King Charles I., Queen Henrietta Maria, and +the popular Duke of Buckingham. + +[Illustration: POCKET-BOOK OF SATIN, EMBROIDERED WITH COLOURED SILKS AND +SILVER-GILT THREAD. + +Said to have been the property of Queen Elizabeth. + +(_In Countess Brownlow's Collection._)] + +The stitches used were generally chain-stitch, split-stitch, petit +point, and lace-stitch; and the patterns were most frequently outlined +with a gimp made of flattened spiral wire, or _purl_, which was a fine +copper wire covered with coloured silks and cut in lengths for use. Very +often, also, small silver spangles were employed, either stitched down +with a piece of purl or a seed-pearl. Frequently the covers were of +velvet with the designs appliquéd down to it, and _laid_ or _couch_ work +outlined the designs. Sometimes flat pieces of metal were cut to shape +and stitched down, as in one instance where the corners of the books +were trimmed with the rays of the sun cut in gold, and stitched over +with a gold thread. + +Many of the charming little bags of which mention has already been made +are supposed to have been worked to hold the Prayer Book and Book of +Psalms, without which no devout lady deemed herself fully equipped. + +The most famous book is Queen Elizabeth's Book in the British Museum. +The cover is of choice green velvet, the flat of the back has five roses +embroidered in lace, raised stitches and gold and pearl. The Royal Arms +are on either side of the book in a lozenge of red silk and pearls. The +whole design, apart from this, is worked in red and white roses and +scrolls of gold and silk. This gorgeous little cover contains "The +Mirrour of Glasse of the Synneful Soul," written by Elizabeth herself, +and of it she writes that she "translated it out of french ryme into +english prose, joyning the sentences together as well as the capacities +of my symple witte and small lerning could extende themselves." It is +dedicated "To our most noble and virtuous Queen Katherine [Katherine +Parr] from Assherige, the last day of the year of our Lord God, 1544." + +In the Bodleian Library there is another treasured little book, again +worked by Queen Elizabeth. It is only 7 inches by 5 inches, and has the +same design on both sides. In this the ground is what is known as +"tapestry stitch," worked in thick, pale-blue silk, and the design is of +interlacing gold and silver threads with a Tudor rose in each corner. +"K. P." is marked on the cover, and shows that this also was worked for +Queen Katherine Parr. + +Yet another little book is in the British Museum. It contains a prayer +composed by Queen Katherine Parr, and is written on vellum by Queen +Elizabeth. + +The cover illustrated is a typical example of the class of embroidered +works of the period. Later the covers showed less intricate work, and +finally developed into mere velvet covers embroidered with silver or +gold. + +[Illustration: STUART EMBROIDERED CAP. (_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + +BLACK WORK. + +A curious phase of Old English embroidery is the well-known "Black +Work," which is said to have been introduced by Catherine of Aragon into +England, and was also known as "Spanish work." The work itself was a +marvel of neatness, precision, and elegant design, but the result cannot +be said to have been commensurate with the labour of its production. +Most frequently the design was of scroll-work, worked with a fine black +silk back-stitching or chain-stitch. Round and round the stitches go, +following each other closely. Bunches of grapes are frequently worked +solidly, and even the popular peascod is worked in outline stitch, and +often the petit point period lace stitches are copied, and roses and +birds worked separately and after stitched to the design. There are many +examples of this famous "Spanish" work in the South Kensington +Museum. Quilts, hangings, coats, caps, jackets, smocks are all to be +seen, some with a couched thread of gold and silver following the lines +of the scrolls. This is said to be the Spanish stitch referred to in the +old list of stitches, and very likely may be so, as the style and manner +are certainly not English; and we know that Catherine of Aragon brought +wonders of Spanish stitchery with her, and she herself was devoted to +the use of the needle. The story of how when called before Cardinal +Wolsey and Campeggio, to answer to King Henry's accusations, she had a +skein of embroidery silk round her neck is well known. + +The black silk outline stitchery or linen lasted well through the late +seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Very little of it is seen outside +the museums, as, not being strikingly beautiful or attractive, it has +been destroyed. + +Another phase of the same stitchery was working cotton and linen +garments, hangings, and quilts in a kind of quilted pattern with yellow +silk. + +Anything more unlike the quilting of fifty years ago cannot be imagined. +The finest materials were used, the padding being placed bit by bit in +its place--not in the wholesale fashion of later years, when a sheet or +two of wadding was placed between the sheets of cotton or linen, and a +coarse back-stitching outlined in great scrawling patterns held the +whole together. The old "quilting" work was made in tiny panels, +illustrating shields and other heraldic devices, and had a surface as +fine as carved ivory. When, as in the case of one sample at South +Kensington, the quilt is additionally embroidered with beautiful fine +floss silk flowers, the effect is very lovely. + + + + +VIII + +STUART PICTURES + + + + +VIII + +STUART PICTURES + + "Petit point"--"Stump work"--Royalistic symbols. + + +Though these pictures bear the name of Stuart, many of them are +undoubtedly Tudor. The earliest (if the evidence of costume is of any +value) must have been worked in Elizabeth's time, but as the +authenticated specimens date only from the reign of James I. they are +known as Stuart. The only pictures worked in the early days of this art +were worked in petit-point, the tiny stitch which imitated tapestry, and +very quaint are the specimens left to us. The favourite themes were +entirely pagan. Gods and goddesses disported themselves among leafy +trees. Cupid lightly shot his arrows, the woods were inhabited by an +unknown flora and fauna which seem all its own. The very dogs seem to be +a different species, having more likeness to the china dogs of the +spotted or liver and white variety which the Staffordshire potters made +at the beginning of our own century. Innumerable little castles were +perched in perfectly inaccessible positions on towering crags, and the +laws of perspective were generally conspicuous by their absence. The sun +in those days was a very visible body, and apparently delightful to +work, no Stuart picture being without one; the rolling clouds oftentimes +are confused with the convoluted body of the caterpillar, little +difference being made in the design. The birds were of very brilliant +plumage, and the world was evidently a very gay and sportive place when +these fair ladies spent their leisure over this embroidery! These early +pictures seldom show the religious feeling that afterwards slowly worked +its way through the Stuart days (though, perhaps, disguised under +royalistic symbolism), until in the reign of Queen Anne it became more +or less a fashion, in pictorial needle-craft. It burst out afresh in the +early nineteenth century and became an absolute obsession of the early +Victorian Berlin-wool workers with most disastrous results to both +design and work. + +Until the end of Charles I.'s reign needlework pictures must have been +scarce, as we find one enumerated in the inventory of his "Closet of +Rarities." It is possible that the many pictures which represent Charles +I. were worked by loyalist ladies, _after his execution_ and _during the +Commonwealth_. In many of these pictures his own hair is said to have +been used, thereby becoming relics of him who was known as "the Martyred +King." On a very finely worked portrait of Charles I., at South +Kensington Museum, King Charles's hair is worked amongst the silken +threads. + +[Illustration: KING CHARLES I., WORKED IN FINE SILK EMBROIDERY. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Throughout this time, no matter what the subjects, most of which were +notably striking scenes from Scripture history, such as "Esther and King +Ahasuerus," "Solomon and the Queen of Sheba," "The Judgment of Solomon" +(a very favourite subject), and other scenes of Old Testament history, +all the kings were Charles I. and all the Queens Henrietta Maria. One +and all wore early Stuart costumes. Even Pharaoh's daughter wore the +handsome dress of the day, with Point lace falling collar and real +pearls round her neck. It is a fashion to jeer at this anachronism; but +may it not perhaps be that we take these pictures too literally, and +deny the workers their feelings of passionate devotion to the lost +cause. Doubtless they worked their loyalty to their beloved monarch into +these pretty and pleasing fancies, just as it is said that the fashion +of "finger-bowls" was introduced later so that the loyal gentlemen of +the day might drink to the King "_over the water_." I see no cause to +deny intelligence to these dear dead women, who were capable of +exquisite needlecraft and fine design, and whose devotion was shown in +many instances by giving up jewels, houses, and lands for the King! + +The fashion of "stump" or stamp work appears to have been derived from +Italy. Italian needlework of this time abounds with it, and, it must be +admitted, of a superior design, and style to that which was known here +as "stump" work. Until the eighteenth century English work was more or +less archaic in every branch. Personally, I see no more absurdity in the +queer doll-like figures than in contemporary wood-carving. It was a +period of tentative effort, and was, of course, beneath criticism. +English Art has ever been an effort until its one bright burst of genius +in the eighteenth century, while the continental nations appear to have +breathed artistic perception with life itself. + +The prototype of our stump work pictures, the Italian raised work, are +gracious, graceful figures perfectly proportioned, and set in lovely +elegant arabesques, with no exaggeration of style or period. Some +specimens of this work must have been brought from Italy, through +France, and the English workers quickly adopted and adapted them to +their own heavier intelligence. Some of the little figures are certainly +very grotesque. Frequently the tiny little hands are larger than the +heads, but the _stitchery_ is exquisite. + +No time seems to have been too long to have been spent in perfecting the +petals of a rose, the loose wing of a butterfly, or to make a realistic +curtain in fine Point lace stitches to hang from the King's canopy. Some +of the King's dresses are said to have been made of tiny treasured +pieces of his garments. There is no doubt that much devoted sentiment +was worked into these little figures, and these touches of nature add a +pathetic interest to them. + +[Illustration: SUPERB EXAMPLE OF STUART PICTURE. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +In the illustration of "King Solomon receiving the Queen of Sheba" from +the South Kensington Collection Solomon is obviously King Charles I., +while the Queen of Sheba is equally recognisable as Queen Henrietta +Maria. The picture is perhaps the finest in the Kensington Collection, +the colours being fresh and the work intact. The little faces are +worked over a padding of soft frayed silk or wool, the features being +drawn in fine back-stitch. Natural hair is worked on the King's and +Queen's heads, and the crowns are real gold thread set with pearls. The +canopy is worked _solidly_ in silk and gold thread, and from it hang +loose curtains in old brocade, worked over and over with gold and silken +thread. + +The King's mantle and that of the Lord Chamberlain are worked in Point +lace stitches, afterwards applied to the bodies and hanging loosely. The +Queen's dress is brocade, worked over with gold and silver, while +strings of real pearls decorate the necks and wrists of the ladies, and +real white lace of the Venetian variety trims the neck and sleeves of +these fairy people. The Stuart castle we see perched up among the trees +and touching the sun's beams is more like an English farmhouse than +Whitehall. Yet either this or Windsor Castle is always supposed to be +represented. + +The British lion and the leopard, again, make the identity of these +little people more certain. The quaint little trees bear most +disproportionate fruits, the acorn and pears being about the same size, +but all beautifully worked in Point-lace stitches over wooden moulds. +The hound and the hare, the butterfly and the grub, and the strange +birds make up one of the most typical Stuart pictures. + +The next illustration shows another development of picture-making. Here +the grounding is of white satin, as in the previous illustration, but +the figures are worked on canvas separately, in fine petit-point +stitch, afterwards being cut away and placed on the white satin ground +with a few silk stitches and the whole outlined with a fine black silk +cord. The subject is "The Finding of Moses," and is as full of +anachronisms as the last, only that here again Pharaoh's daughter is +worked in memory of Queen Henrietta Maria, and the tiny boy in the +corner is Charles II., and Moses the infant Duke of York. The +four-winged cherubs are the guardian angels who are watching over the +lost fortunes of the Stuart family, and the rose of England and the lilies +of France which form the border are emblematical of the royal lineage of +their lost King's family. The hound and hare still chase each other +gaily round the border, and in the picture the hare is seen emerging, +like the Stuarts, from exile and obscurity. + +Sufficient has perhaps been said to cause those who possibly may have +misunderstood these pictures to give them another glance, and allow +imagination to carry them back to the times of the exiled Royal Family +and their brave adherents, whose women allowed not their memories to +slumber nor their labours to flag. These pictures must have been made +during the Commonwealth and the reign of Charles II. In no case, to my +knowledge, has King Charles II. been depicted in stitchery, nor yet +Catherine of Braganza. James II. is equally ignored, and with him their +mission seemed to have been accomplished. Possibly the people had had by +this time sufficient of the Stuarts, and the memory of King Charles the +martyr had waxed dim. Certain it is that with James II. Stuart +needlework pictures suddenly ceased. + +[Illustration: STUART PICTURE, SHOWING THE FINDING OF MOSES. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + +_Stump work Symbols._ + +The symbolism of the various animals, birds, insects, and flowers which +are, apparently without rhyme or reason, placed in one great disarray in +the Stuart pictures is said to have been heraldic and symbolic. The +sunbeam coming from a cloud, the white falchion, and the chained hart +are heraldic devices belonging to Edward III. + +The buck and the strawberry, which are so often seen, belong to the +Frazer Clan of Scotland, and may have been worked by ladies who were +kith and kin of this clan. + +The unicorn was the device of James I. and the siren or mermaid of Lady +Frazer, who is said to have worked her own golden hair in the heart of a +Tudor rose on a book cover for James I. + +The hart was also a device of Richard II. and the "broom pod" of the +Plantagenets. The caterpillar and butterfly were specially badges of +Charles I., while the oak-tree and acorn were invariably worked into +every picture in memory of Charles II.'s escape in an oak tree. + + + + +IX + +SAMPLERS + + + + +IX + +SAMPLERS + + Real art work--Specimens in South Kensington Museum--High price + now obtained. + + +A "sampler" is an example or a sample of the worker's skill and +cleverness in design and stitching. When they first appeared, as far as +we know about the middle of the seventeenth century, they were merely a +collection of embroidery, lace, cut and drawn work stitches, and had +little affinity to the samplers of a later date, which seemed especially +ordained to show various patterns of cross stitches, the alphabet, and +the numerals. + +The early samplers were real works of art; they were frequently over a +yard long, not more than a quarter of a yard wide, and were adorned with +as many as thirty different patterns of lace and cut and drawn work. +This extreme narrowness was to enable the sampler to be rolled on a +little ivory stick, like the Japanese _kakemonas_. + +The foundation of all the early samplers was a coarse linen, and to this +fact we owe the preservation of many of them. Those made two hundred +years later, on a coarse, loose canvas, even now show signs of decay, +while these ancient ones on linen are as perfect as when made, only +being gently mellowed by Time to the colour of old ivory. + +The earliest sampler known is dated 1643, and was worked by Elizabeth +Hinde. It is only 6 inches by 6-1/2 inches, and is entirely lacework, +and apparently has been intended for part of a sampler. The worker +perhaps changed her mind and considered rightfully that she had +accomplished her _chef d'oeuvre_, or as so often explains these +unfinished specimens, the Reaper gathered the flower, and only this +dainty piece of stitching was left to perpetuate the memory of Elizabeth +Hinde. + +The sampler in question is just one row of cut and drawn work and +another of fine Venetian lacework, worked in "punto in aria." A lady in +Court dress holds a rose to shield herself from Cupid, a dear little +fellow with wings, who is shooting his dart at her heart. Perhaps poor +Elizabeth Hinde died of it and this is her "swan song." + +[Illustration: A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY "SAMPLER" (ENGLISH), SHOWING CUT +AND DRAWN WORK. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +The earliest samplers appeared to have been worked only on white cotton +or silk. A favourite design, apart from the lacework samplers, was the +"damask pattern" sampler, a specimen of which may be noted, commencing +with the fifth row, on the sampler illustrated. Sometimes the sampler +was entirely composed of it, and although ineffective, remains as a +marvel of skill. It was worked entirely in flat satin stitch and eyelet +holes, known as the "bird's eye" pattern. In the illustration four rows +of cutwork will be noted, followed by five rows of drawn threadwork, +and above are patterns worked in floral and geometric designs in +coloured silks. The alphabet and the date 1643 complete this monument of +skill, which may be seen in the South Kensington Museum. + +The succeeding illustration shows a more ambitious attempt, and is +considered one of the finest specimens known. It was worked by Elizabeth +Mackett, 1696. It is on white linen with ten rows of floral patterns +worked with coloured silks in cross, stem, and satin stitches, with some +portions worked separately and applied. Five rows of white satin stitch, +two rows of alphabet letters in coloured silks, and four rows of +exquisite punto in aria lace patterns are followed by the alphabet again +in white stitches and the maker's name and date. The sampler is in +superb preservation, the colours are particularly rich and well chosen. +This sampler is also from the South Kensington Collection. Often the +worker's name is followed by a verse or rhyme having a delightfully +prosaic tendency. One can imagine the poor girls, in the early days we +are writing of, writhing under the infliction of having slowly and +painstakingly to work the solemn injunction-- + + "When this you see remember me + And keep me in your mind, + And be not like a weathercock + That turns at every wind. + + When I am dead and laid in grave, + And all my bones are rotten, + By this you may remember me + When I should be forgotten." + +And we can appreciate how little Maggie Tulliver ("The Mill on the Floss") +must have girded at the philosophy she was compelled to work into her +sampler-- + + "Look well to what you take in hand, + For learning is better than house or land; + When land is gone and money is spent + Then learning is most excellent." + +With the eighteenth century the beauty of the Samplers distinctly +declined. They became squarer, and were bordered with a running pattern, +and the whole canvas became more or less pictorial. Inevitably the end +of this art came. Ugly realistic bowpots with stumpy trees decorated the +picture in regular order. The alphabet still appeared, and moral +reflection seemed to be the aim of the worker rather than to make the +Sampler show beauty of stitchery. Quaint little maps of England are +often seen, surrounded with floral borders, but it remained to the early +nineteenth century to show how the Sampler became reduced to absurdity. +One of the quaintest and most amusing Samplers at South Kensington is a +12-inch by 8-inch example in woollen canvas and embroidered with +coloured silk. At the lower end is a soldier, a tiny realistic house, a +dovecot, any number of flowering plants, a stag and other animals. Above +is a band of worked embroidery enclosing the words, "This is my dear +Father." The remaining spaces are filled in with angels blowing +trumpets, double-headed eagle, peacocks and other birds, and baskets of +fruit. In spite of its absurdity, this little piece is far more +pleasant than the tombstone inscriptions which abound, and is, after +all, delightfully suggestive of home and affection. + +[Illustration: EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER," SHOWING EMBROIDERY IN COLOURED +SILK. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +[Illustration: EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER," SHOWING BIRD'S-EYE EMBROIDERY +AND CUT AND DRAWN WORK. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Another quaint piece at South Kensington is a sampler worked by poor +Harriet Taylor, _aged seven!_ At the top are four flying angels, two in +clouds flanking a crown beneath the letters "G. R." In the middle stands +a flower-wreathed arch, with columns holding vases of flowering plants; +above are the words, "The Temple of Fancy," and within an enclosed space +the following homily: + + "Not Land but Learning + Makes a man complete + Not Birth but Breeding + Makes him truly Great + Not Wealth but Wisdom + Does adorn the State + Virtue not Honor + Makes him Fortunate + Learning, Breeding, Wisdom + Get these three + Then Wealth and Honor + Will attend on thee." + +Then follows a house called "The Queen's Palace," standing in an +enclosed flower-garden. This masterpiece of moral philosophy from the +hands of a child of seven years is dated 1813. + +An exaggerated conception of the value of old Samplers is very widely +spread. Only the seventeenth-century Samplers are really of consequence, +and these fetch fancy prices. In the sale-rooms a long narrow Sampler +of lace stitches and drawn-thread work would bring as much as a +handsome piece of lace. They are practically unattainable, and in this +case the law of supply and demand does not obtain. It is beyond the +needlewomen of the present day to imitate these old Samplers. Life is +too short, and demands upon time are so many and varied, that a lifetime +of work would result in making only one. Therefore, the fortunate owners +of these seventeenth-century Samplers may cherish their possessions, and +those less lucky possess their souls in patience, and hoard their golden +guineas in the hope of securing one. Twenty years ago a few pounds would +have been ample to secure a fine specimen, but £30 will now secure only +a short fragment. + +During the last three years I have not seen a good Sampler at any London +Curio or lace shop, and none appear in the sale-rooms. The +eighteenth-century Samplers are comparatively common, the map variety +especially so, and can be purchased for a pound or so, but these are not +desirable to the collector. + + + + +X + +THE WILLIAM AND MARY EMBROIDERIES + + +[Illustration: JACOBEAN WALL-HANGING WORKED IN COLOURED CREWELS ON LINEN +GROUND. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +X + +THE WILLIAM AND MARY EMBROIDERIES + + Queen Mary "a born needlewoman"--The Hampton Court + Embroideries--Revival of petit point--Jacobean hangings. + + +One of the most convincing facts in arguments that there _is_ a revival +in the gentle art of needlecraft is that it has become the fashion to +drape our windows, cover our furniture, and panel our walls with printed +copies of the Old Jacobean needlework. Many people, knowing nothing +whatever about the history of needlework, wonder where the designs for +the printed linens which line the windows of Messrs. Liberty, Goodall +and Burnett's colossal frontages in Regent Street have been found. In +time amazement gives way to admiration for these quaint blues and +greens, roses and pale yellows, worked in great scrolls with exotic +flowers and still more exotic birds, and the funny little hillocks with +delightful little pagoda-like cottages nestling amongst them, and many +and various little animals which seem to keep perpetual holiday under +the everlasting blooms. The designs are taken bodily from the +historical hangings of the later seventeenth century. After the +abdication and flight of James II. to St. Germains, his daughter Mary +came over with her Dutch husband, William the Stadtholder--or, rather, +William came over and brought his wife, the daughter of the late king, +for William had no intention of assuming the style and life of Prince +Consort, but came well to the front, and kept there. It was not +"VICTORIA _and Albert_" in those days, but WILLIAM and MARY, who ruled +England, and ruled it well. William III. must have been a man of strong +personality, and he managed to quell all the rebellions of his reign, +and during the time he ruled over us the country settled down to a +peaceful state that has remained to the present time. + +Queen Mary had quite sufficient employment in settling herself and her +household, and generally managing the domestic matters pertaining to the +new kingdom she had come into. She apparently had a very free hand in +rebuilding Hampton Court, which she particularly made her home, +absolutely pulling the interior down, and rebuilding and redecorating it +according to her own taste, which was not that of the Stuart persuasion +with its gorgeous magnificence, but the more homely and solid Dutch. +Very little of the original Hampton Court _interior_, built and +furnished by Cardinal Wolsey, exists. Just here and there we find +delightfully dark little dens with the original linen-fold panellings +and ceilings that are a ravishment to look upon; but mostly the rooms +are high, plain-panelled, and with the quaint ingle-nook fireplaces, +with shelves above, upon which Mary placed her lovely "blue and white" +porcelain which had been brought to her by the Dutch merchants who at +that time were the great traders of the sea. + +[Illustration: ENLARGEMENT OF "JACOBEAN" SPRAY. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Queen Mary ought to be regarded as the patron saint of English +needlewomen. She was happiest when employed furnishing every +bed-covering, every chair and stool, and supplying the hangings for her +favourite home. It is said that she spent her days over her embroidery +frame, knowing full well that affairs of State were in the capable hands +of her husband. + +There are few relics left of her handiwork outside Hampton Court. She +left no dainty little book-covers, bags, or boxes, as her ideas were +fixed on larger pieces of embroidery. Had she lived in the Berlin-wool +picture days, she would have filled every nook and cranny with these +atrocities, as many humbler devotees to the needle have done to our own +knowledge. Needlework can become a _passion_, and certainly Queen Mary +must have possessed it. + +After the complete collapse of the Stuart stump pictures, when every +vestige of loyalty seems to have been swept away with the hated James +II., the ancient Petit Point pictures came back into fashion. Very +clever work was put into them, but, alas! their scope was purely to +depict religious scenes of the rigorous kind. No dainty fairy-like +little people now ruled in pictured story, but actual representations of +Bible history. + +The illustration of "The Baptism of the Ethiopian Eunuch by St. Philip" +is a fair sample of the needlework picture of this time. The picture is +a strange mixture of the early Stuart Petit Point, the Jacobean +wall-hanging, and the newly revived religious spirit. The duck-pond, the +swans and the water-plants might have been copied bodily from James I.'s +time. The paroquet and the flying bird, and the immense leaves and +blossoms, are direct from the wall-hangings, while the figures only too +surely foretell the coming dark days of needlecraft, when a Scripture +picture and a coarsely worked sampler were part of every girl's liberal +education. The work in this picture is extremely good, and it is +excruciatingly funny without intending to be so. The pretty little +equipage with its diminutive ponies surely was never intended to carry +either St. Philip or the Eunuch! The open book, with Hebraic +inscription, is very delightful. It brings to mind the Tables of the Law +rather than the light reading that the charming little Cinderella coach +should carry. + +These pictures are not common, and we scarcely know whether to be +thankful for them or not. Unlike the early petit point, they were worked +in _worsteds_, whereas the early pictures were wrought in silk. The moth +has a natural affinity for wool, as we all know, and his tribe has +cleared off many hundreds of examples. Why so many of the old Jacobean +hangings remain is that they were worked for _use_, and not ornament, +and even after they ceased to be fashionable ornaments for sitting and +bed rooms, they were either relegated to the servants' quarters, or +given to dependants, who used them constantly, shaking and keeping +them in repair, as the eighteenth-century housewives liked to keep their +homes swept and garnished. + +[Illustration: NEEDLEWORK PICTURE OF QUEEN ANNE PERIOD. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +It is strange to see these old Jacobean hangings (perhaps the drapery of +the now tabooed four-post bedstead), which might some thirty years ago +have been carried off for the asking, sell at Christie's for £800, as +happened in the dispersal of the Massey-Mainwaring sale last year. Even +a panel of no use except to frame as a picture, say 4 feet by 3 feet, +will fetch £30 and a full-sized bed-cover can only be bought for over +£100. The reason is not far to seek. The colouring and the drawing of +this fine old Crewel-work are exquisite (even though the design savours +of the grotesque), and Time has dealt very leniently with the dyes. I +endeavoured to match some of these old worsteds a little time ago, and +though able to find the colours, could not get the tone. After much +tribulation I was advised to hang the skeins of worsted on the trees in +the garden and _forget all about them_, and certainly wind and weather +have softened the somewhat garish worsteds to the soft, _fade_ colours +of the old work. + +The same class of embroidery was executed during the reign of Queen +Anne, though she herself did little of it. Costly silks and brocades and +Venetian laces were the dress of the day, and no little dainty +accessories appear to have been made. + + + + +XI + +PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY + + +[Illustration: A FINE "PAINTED FACE" SILK-EMBROIDERED PICTURE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XI + +PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY + + The "painted faces" period--Method of production--Revival of + Scriptural "motifs"--Modern fakes--Black silk and hair copies + of engravings. + + +An immense number of pictures must have been worked during the +eighteenth century. Almost, we might say, no English home is without an +example. Much of the work is intensely bad, and only that Time has +tenderly softened the colours, and the old-time dresses add an element +of quaintness to the pictures, can they be tolerated. Works of art they +are not, and, indeed, were never intended to occupy the place their +owners now proudly claim for them. Just here and there a picture of the +painted face type is a masterpiece of stitchery, as in the example +illustrated, where every thread has been worked by an _artiste_. Looking +at this little gem across a room, the effect is that of a charming old +colour print, so tenderly are the lines of shading depicted. This is the +only picture of this class that I have seen for years as an absolutely +perfect specimen of the eighteenth-century silk pictures, though +doubtless many exist. + +The discrepancy which is usually found is that, although the design and +outline is perfect, the faces and hands exquisitely painted, the +needlework part of the picture has been executed in a foolish, +inartistic manner, and no method of light and shade has been observed. +Some little time ago I published an article in one of the popular +monthly Magazines illustrating this same picture, and was afterwards +inundated with letters from correspondents from far and near sending +their pictures for valuation and--admiration! Not one of these pictures +was good, though there were varying degrees of _badness_. But in no +instance was the painted face crudely drawn or badly coloured. + +The explanation is that just as the modern needlewoman goes to a +Needlework Depôt and obtains pieces of embroidery already commenced and +the design of the whole drawn ready for completion, so these old needle +pictures were sold ready for embroidering, the outline of the trees +sketched in fine sepia lines, the distant landscape already painted, the +faces and hands of the figures charmingly coloured, in many instances by +first-class artists. When we remember that the eighteenth century was +_par excellence_ the great period of English portrait painting and +colour printing, we can understand that possibly really fine artists +were willing to paint these exquisite faces on fine silk and satin, just +as good artists of the present day often paint "pot-boilers" while +waiting for fame. + +[Illustration: EMBROIDERED SILK PICTURE OF "THE LAST SUPPER." + +Eighteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Angelica Kauffmann's style was often copied. Is it too much to believe +that some of these charming faces may have been from her hands? We know +that she painted furniture and china, therefore why not the faces of the +needlework pictures so nearly akin to her own work? + +The eighteenth-century costume was particularly adapted to this pretty +work. We cannot imagine the voluminous robes of Queen Mary or Queen Anne +in needle-stitchery, but the soft, silky lawns of the Georgian periods, +the high-waisted bodices, the _bouffant_ fichus and the flowing +head-dresses, all were specially easy and graceful to work. Many of the +pretty children Sir Joshua loved to paint were copied. "Innocence" made +a charming picture, and several of the less rustic Morland pictures were +copied. + +We would imagine that when the beginnings of the picture were so +glorious the needlewoman would have made some endeavour to work up to +it. But, alas! it was not so. Though often the stitching is neat and +small, not an idea of shading seems to have entered the worker's mind, +and whole spaces, nay, a complete garment, are often worked solid in one +tone of colour! On the whole there is far more artistic sense and +feeling in the Stump pictures it is the fashion to deride. + +Not always were dainty pastoral and domestic scenes worked. Very ghastly +creations are still existent of scriptural subjects. Coarsely worked in +wool, instead of silk, or in a mixture of both. The painting is still +good, but the work and the subjects are execrable! "Abraham about to +sacrifice Isaac," on the pile of faggots already laid, and Isaac bound +on it, with a very woolly lamb standing ready as a substitute, was a +favourite subject. "Abraham dismissing Hagar and Ishmael," with a +malignant-looking Sarah in the distance, vies with the former in +popularity. "The Woman of Samaria," and "The Entombment," are another +pair of unpleasant pictures which we are often called upon to admire. + +The best of these pictures were worked in fine floss silk, not quite +like the floss silk of to-day, as it had more twist and body in it, with +just a little fine chenille, and very tiny bits of silver thread to +heighten the effect. The worst were worked in _crewel_ wools of crude +colours. Fortunately, the moth has a special predilection for these +pictures, and they are slowly being eaten out of existence, in spite of +being cherished as heirlooms and works of art. + +Another pretty style which we seldom meet with was some part of the +picture covered with the almost obsolete "ærophane," a kind of chiffon +or crape which was much in request even up to fifty years ago. A certain +part of the draperies was worked on the silk ground, without any attempt +at finish. This was covered with ærophane, and outlined so as to attach +it to the figure. This again was worked upon with very happy effects, +very fine darning stitches making the requisite depth of shading. The +illustration shows the use of this, but this cannot be said to be a very +good specimen. + +[Illustration: "PAINTED FACE" SILK-EMBROIDERED PICTURE. + +Eighteenth Century. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +These painted face, silk-worked pictures are the only needlework +examples the collector _need to beware of_, as they are being reproduced +by the score. The method of working in the poorer specimens is very +simple, and it pays the "faker" to sell for £2 or £3 what takes, +perhaps, only half a day to produce. When a well-executed picture is +produced it is worth money, but so far I have seen none, except at the +Royal School of Needlework, where the copying of old pictures of the +period is exceedingly well done, and not intended to deceive. The +prices, however, are almost prohibitive, as no modern needlework picture +is worth from £15 to £30. They are, after all, only copies, and in no +sense of the word works of art. + +During the eighteenth century, also, a fashion set in of adorning +engravings with pieces of cloth, silk, and tinsel. At best it was a +stupid fancy, and was responsible for the destruction of many fine old +mezzotints and coloured prints. The hands, face, and background of an +engraving were cut out, and pasted on a sheet of cardboard, pieces of +some favourite brocaded gown, perhaps, were attached to the neck and +shoulders, tiny lace tuckers were inserted, and gorgeous jewellery was +simulated by wretched bits of tinsel trimming. The realism of the Stuart +stump picture was never so atrocious as this baleful invention, which +was as meretricious as a waxwork show. + +Not so popular, but far better, were the pictures worked on white silk +with black silk and hair. There were no artistic aspirations about +these--they were copies in black and white of the engravings of the +day, just as a pen-and-ink or pencil copy might be made. Very dainty +stitchery was put in them, the stronger parts of the lines being in fine +black silk, the finer and more distant being worked in human hair of +various shades from black to brown. Occasionally golden and even white +hair is used, and the effect is often that of a faded engraving. The +silk ground on which these little pictures were worked is, however, +often cracked with age, and many pretty specimens are ruined. The +illustration shows an example of the type of picture, and depicts +"Charlotte weeping over the Tomb of Werther." + +[Illustration: BLACK SILK AND HAIR PICTURE. + +Imitation of Engraving. Eighteenth Century. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XII + +NEEDLEWORK PICTURES OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY + + + + +XII + +NEEDLEWORK PICTURES OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY + + Entire decline of needlework as an art--Miss Linwood's + invention!--The Berlin-wool pictures--Lack of efficient + instruction--Waste of magnificent opportunity at South + Kensington Museum. + + +It were kindest to ignore 19th century needlework, but in a book +treating of English embroidery something must be said to bridge over the +time when Needlecraft as an Art was _dead_. During the earlier part of +the century taste was bad, during the middle it was beyond criticism, +and from then to the time of the "greenery-yallery" æsthetic revival all +and everything made by woman's fingers ought to be buried, burnt, or +otherwise destroyed. Indeed, if that drastic process could be carried +out from the time good Queen Adelaide reigned to the early "eighties" we +might not, now and ever, have to bow our heads in utter abjection. + +The originator and moving spirit of this bad period was Miss Linwood, +who conceived the idea of copying oil paintings in woolwork. She died +in 1845. Would that she had never been born! When we think of the many +years which English women have spent over those wickedly hideous +Berlin-wool pictures, working their bad drawing and vilely crude colours +into those awful canvases, and imagining that they were earning undying +fame as notable women for all the succeeding ages, death was too good +for Miss Linwood. The usual boiling oil would have been a fitter end! +Miss Linwood made a great _furore_ at the time of her invention, and +held an exhibition in the rooms now occupied by Messrs. Puttick & +Simpson, Leicester Square. Can we not imagine the shade of the great Sir +Joshua Reynolds, whose home and studio these rooms had been, revisiting +the glimpses of the moon, and while wandering up and down that famous +old staircase forsaking his home for ever after one horrified glance at +Miss Linwood's invention? + +Not only Miss Linwood, but Mrs. Delany and Miss Knowles made themselves +famous for Berlin-wool pictures. The kindest thing to say is that the +specimens which are supposed to have been worked by their own hands are +considerably better than those of the half-dozen generations of their +followers. During the middle and succeeding twenty years of the +nineteenth century the notable housewife of every class amused herself, +at the expense of her mind, by working cross-stitch pictures with +crudely coloured wools (royal blue and rose-pink, magenta, +emerald-green, and deep crimson were supposed to represent the actual +colours of Nature), on very coarse canvas. Landseer's paintings were +favourite studies, "Bolton Abbey in the Olden Times" lending itself to a +choice range of violent colours and striking incidents. Nothing was too +sacred for the Berlin-wool worker to lay hands upon. "The Crucifixion," +"The Nativity," "The Flight into Egypt," "The Holy Family" were not only +supposed to show the skill of the worker, but also the proper frame of +mind the embroideress possessed. Pleasing little horrors such as the +"Head of the Saviour in His Agony," and that of the Virgin with all her +tortured mother love in her eyes were considered fit ornaments for +drawing-room, which by the way were also adorned with wool and cotton +crochet antimacassars, waxwork flowers under glass, and often +astonishingly good specimens of fine Chelsea, Worcester, and Oriental +china. + +Never was the questions of how "having eyes and yet seeing not" more +fully exemplified. The nation abounded in paintings, prints, fine +needlework, and the product of our greatest period of porcelain +manufacture. Fine examples were at hand everywhere. Exquisite prints +belonging to our only good period, the eighteenth century, were common; +yet rather than try their skill in copying these, the needlewomen, who +possessed undoubted skill, enthusiasm, and infinite patience, preferred +to copy realistic paintings of the Landseer school and the highly +coloured prints of the Baxter and Le Blond period. + +Unfortunately, the craze is by no means buried. Within the last twelve +months I was invited to see the "works" of a wonderful needlewoman in a +little Middlesex village. The local clergyman and doctor were +sufficiently benighted even in these days of universal culture to admire +her work, and her fame had spread. Room after room was filled with 10 by +8-feet canvases; every drawer in the house was crammed with the result +of this clever woman's work--for clever she undoubtedly was. After +exhausting all the known subjects of Landseer and his school, she had +struck out a line for herself, and had copied the _Graphic_ and +_Illustrated London News_ Supplements of the stirring scenes from the +South African War, such as "The Siege of Ladysmith," "The Death of the +Prince Imperial" in all its gruesome local colouring, were worked on +gigantic canvases. Her great _chef d'oeuvre_ was, however, the +memorial statue of Queen Victoria, copied from the _Graphic_ Supplement +_in tones of black, white, and grey_, a most clever piece of work; +but--well, she was happy and more than delighted with my perfectly +honest remark that I had _never seen anything like it_! + +Ah! if only this dear woman and the many others who are wasting their +time and eyesight over fashions which perish could only be reached and +aroused by the influence of the lovely old English stitchery of our +great period! If only the purblind authorities and custodians of our +National collections could awaken to the infinite possibilities which +they hold, once again "Opus Anglicum" might rule the world, and the +labour of even one woman's life might be of lasting value. It is useless +to refer to the many schools of embroidery there are in different parts +of the country, where fine work is being done on the best lines. These +schools, from the Royal School of Needlework downwards, are "closed +corners," and no attempt is made to reach the great public. The Royal +School of Needlework is maintained by no subsidy as it ought to be, but +by the many ladies of position and taste who liberally support it, both +for the instruction and employment of "ladies of reduced circumstances," +and for _the disposal of its work at very high prices_. Other schools in +town are simply private adventure institutions, run at a considerable +profit to the principals. + +The superb collection at South Kensington might as well be buried in the +crypt of Westminster Cathedral for all the value it is to the general +public. There is not the slightest attempt to allow these unique pieces +of "Opus Anglicum" to point a moral or adorn a tale. The magnificent +copes and vestments, of which there are some score, are merely +tabulated, paragraphed, and photographed, and there is an end of them. +During my constant visits to these treasures of English Art I have not +once discovered another interested visitor amongst these beautiful +vestments; and the officials, when interviewed, though perfectly +courteous, apparently resent inquiries; and woe betide the unfortunate +inquirers who _might_ have found the required information from the tiny +little printed card hidden either too low or too high in the dark +recesses of the corridors, and so spared these _savants_ the trouble of +an interview! + +Why a continuous course of lectures on this and every kindred Art +subject is not made compulsory at the Victoria and Albert Museum is one +of the burning questions of the hour among the cultured collectors of +the day. The custodians are supposed to be men of special insight in the +branches over which they preside, yet for all the advantage to the +public they might as well be waxwork dummies. What we want as a nation +is "culture while we wait," and writ so large that those who run may +read, and until this consummation is attained we shall ever remain in +the Slough of Despond, and Art for Art's sake will continue dead. + + + + +XIII + +EMBROIDERY IN "COSTUME" + + + + +XIII + +EMBROIDERY IN "COSTUME" + + Early Greek garments--Biblical references to + embroidery--Ecclesiastical garments--Eighteenth-century + dresses, coats, and waistcoats--Muslin embroideries. + + +The subject of Costume has been most admirably treated in another volume +of this series, but a reference must be made to it as affecting our +topic, English Embroidery, as costume has played no little part in its +history. + +From the earliest ages embroidery has been used to decorate garments. +The ancient Greeks embroidered the hems of their graceful draperies in +the well-known Greek fret and other designs so invariably seen on the +old Greek vases. The legend that Minerva herself taught the Greeks the +art of embroidery illustrates how deeply the art was understood; and the +pretty story told by an old botanist of how the foxglove came by its +name and its curious bell-like flowers is worth repeating. In the old +Greek days, when gods and goddesses were regarded as having the +attributes of humanity in addition to those of deities, Juno was one +day amusing herself with making tapestry, and, after the manner of the +people, put a thimble on her finger. Jupiter, "playing the rogue with +her," took her thimble and threw it away, and down it dropped to the +earth. The goddess was very wroth, and in order to pacify her Jupiter +turned the thimble into a flower, which now is known as Digitalis, or +finger-stole. + +This little fairy tale can scarcely be taken as proof conclusive of the +existence of either needle tapestry or thimble use, but its telling may +amuse the reader. + +In all ancient histories we find continuous references to the +embroidered garment worn by its people. It was well recognised that no +material was sufficiently beautiful not to be further embellished with +rich embroideries. In the Psalms we find that "Pharaoh's daughter shall +be brought to the king in a raiment of needlework," and that "her +clothing is of wrought gold." + +Phrygia was above all the country most noted for embroideries of gold, +and for many years the name "Phrygian embroidery" was sufficient to +describe any highly decorated specimen. It is said that the name of the +vestment or trimming, the "orphry" is derived from the word +"Auri-phrygium," meaning "gold of Phrygian embroidery." + +The Phrygians are credited with having taught the Egyptians the art, +while the Hebrews, while sojourning in the land of Egypt, learned the +art from their captors, and carried it with them all through their +journeys to the Promised Land, and their final settlement in Palestine. +The mention of gold and purple embroideries, both as garments and +hangings, is conspicuous throughout all Bible history. The Egyptian and +Greek arts are in almost all respects concurrent. The Phoenicians +carried examples of each country's work from one to another. After the +conquest of Greece the Romans absorbed her art, and developed it in +their own special style. They in turn carried their arts and crafts to +Gaul and Britain, and by degrees needlecraft permeated the whole of +Europe. + +Dealing with the embroidered costumes of our own country, the ancient +records, illuminated Missals, and other contemporary data show that very +sumptuous were both the ecclesiastical and lay garments. Heavy gold +embroideries were worked on the hems of skirts and mantles. The Kings' +coronation robes and mantles were beautiful specimens of handicraft, +often after a king's death being given to the churches for vestments. +From Anglo-Saxon to Norman times extensive use was made of the work of +the needle for clothing, but after the Conquest till quite late in the +Tudor period little has been found to throw light upon the use of +embroidery for the lay dress of the time. All woman's taste and energy +seem to have been devoted to make monumental embroideries for church +use. + +It was, indeed, not until the gorgeous period of Henry VIII. that +embroidery, as distinct from garment-making, appeared; and then +everything became an object worthy of decoration. Much fine stitchery +was put into the fine white undergarments of that time, and the +overdresses of both men and women became stiff with gold thread and +jewels. Much use was made of slashing and quilting, the point of +junction being dotted with pearls and precious stones. Noble ladies wore +dresses heavily and richly embroidered with gold, and the train was so +weighty that train-bearers were pressed into service. In the old +paintings the horses belonging to kings and nobles wear trappings of +heavily embroidered gold. Even the hounds who are frequently represented +with their masters have collars massively decorated with gold bullion. + +The skirts of the ladies of this time were thickly encrusted with +jewels, folds of silk being crossed in a kind of lattice-work, each +crossing being fixed with a pearl or jewel, and a similar precious stone +being inserted in the square formed by the trellis. The long stomachers +were one gleaming mass of jewelled embroidery, the tiny caps or +headdresses being likewise heavily studded with gems. + +During the reign of Charles I. a much daintier style of dress appeared. +Velvet and silken suits were worn by the men, handsomely but +appropriately trimmed with the fine "punto in aria" or Reticella laces +of Venice; and in this and the three succeeding reigns dress was of +sumptuous velvets, satins, and heavy silks, unembroidered, but trimmed, +and in Charles II.'s time _loaded_ with costly laces. It will be noted +that whenever lace is in the ascendant, embroidery suffers, as is +quite natural. Lace itself is sufficient adornment for fine raiment. + +[Illustration: _Photo by E. Gray, Bayswater._ + +MRS. TICKELL AND HER SISTER, MRS. SHERIDAN, BY GAINSBOROUGH, SHOWING HOW +LACE WAS SUPERSEDED BY FILMY MUSLINS. + +(_Dulwich Gallery._)] + +As the use of the fine Venetian and Flemish and French laces declined, +and tuckers and frillings of Mechlin, Valenciennes, and Point +d'Angleterre appeared, the use of embroidery asserted itself, and the +pretty satins and daintily coloured silks of William and Mary, Queen +Anne, and more specially the earlier Georges, began to be embroidered in +a specially delicate fashion. Fine floss silk was used in soft +colourings, and whole surfaces were covered with tiny embroidered sprays +of natural-coloured flowers. Really exquisite stitchery was put into the +graceful honeysuckle, the pansy, carnation, and rose clusters which +decorated the dresses. The bodices, sacques, and skirts of the early +eighteenth-century ladies were embroidered with real artistic taste and +feeling. Some of the old dresses kept at South Kensington show the +exquisite specimens of this class of needlework; while the coats and +waistcoats of the sterner sex are not a whit behind the feminine +garments in beauty. The long waistcoats were most frequently made of +cream, pale blue, or white silk or satin, delightfully embroidered with +tiny sprays of blossoms, and fastened with fine old paste buttons; while +the coat, frequently of brocade, was heavily embroidered down the front +with three or four inches of solid embroidery of foliage and flowers, +oftentimes mixed with gold and silver threads. The tiny cravat of +Mechlin, cuff ruffles, knee breeches, silken hose, and buckled shoes, +along with the powdered hair, complete a costume that has never been +equalled, either before or afterwards, in beauty, grace, and elegance. +During the William IV. and the long Victorian period, with the exception +of a very fine embroidery on muslin, in the earlier part of it, nothing +but fine stitchery for the use of underwear was made, if we except the +hundreds and thousands of yards of cut and buttonholed linen which +seemed to have been the solace and delight of our grandmothers when they +allowed themselves to be torn away from their beloved Berlin-wool work. +To sit on a cushion and sew a fine seam appears to have been the +amusement of the properly constituted women of the early and +mid-nineteenth century. + + + + +XIV + +SALE PRICES + + + + +XIV + +SALE PRICES + + +Ancient embroideries so seldom come into the salerooms that it is rarely +an opportunity occurs for obtaining market prices, therefore Lady +Wolseley's sale on July 12, 1906, must be accepted as a standard. +Immense prices are asked at the antique shops, the dealers apparently +basing their prices on this sale by auction and _doubling_ them. I have +visited every shop in the trade in search of prices for this book before +procuring the auctioneer's catalogue, and was aghast at the terrific +sums asked for oftentimes indifferent specimens in comparison to what +was paid in the auction-room. During the past year anything from £15 +15s. to £40 has been paid at Christie's for specimens of varying degrees +of perfection of work and condition. The latter state is even of greater +importance than the first, as no matter how good the work originally, if +discoloured and frayed, prices go down and down. Nearly all the finest +specimens of the Stump-work period are marred by the tarnishing of the +gold and silver threads. Instead of these being a glory and a great +enhancement to the embroidery, they prove a great disfigurement, and +thereby cause a considerable reduction in value. + +The earlier petit point pictures, having little or no bullion in their +execution (and when cared for and not exposed to too much sunlight), +have kept their condition very well, and now are quite the favourite +kind for collection. It speaks much for the quality of the silks used +and the dyes of nearly three hundred years ago that the fugitive greens +and blues and delicate roses in these little works of art, as in the +superb tapestries of the same date, should be as fine as when made, +whereas to-day's colours are as fleeting as the glories of the rainbow. + + * * * * * + +The following are the principal prices in Lady Wolseley's sale: + + £ s. d. + +A small bag, red and gold brocade 2 15 0 + +A small bag or purse 5 0 0 + +A fine bead book-cover 6 0 0 + +Same, trimmed with silver lace (Harris) 6 16 0 + +A pair of embroidered shoes (Harris) 6 0 0 + +A small pocket-book, silk embroidery on +silver ground 8 17 6 + +A pair of Stuart shoes 9 19 6 + +A stumpwork picture, a most curious globe, +showing Europe, Asia, Africa, and America, +1648 (S. G. Fenton) 24 0 0 + +A double book of Psalms, embroidered binding +with Tudor rose 23 10 0 + +A petit point picture, 12-1/2 × 9-1/2 11 11 0 + +A small picture, partly sketched and partly +worked 4 14 6 + +A Stuart stump picture, 18 × 15-1/2 18 18 0 + +A Stuart stump picture, King under canopy, +17-1/2 × 14 14 14 6 + +A Stuart bullion picture, vase, in +tortoiseshell frame, 23 × 18 8 8 0 + +Same, with Herodias's daughter and John the +Baptist 5 5 0 + +A portrait of Henry, Prince of Wales, in +flat-stitch on rose satin 21 0 0 + +Another on satin, "Bathsheba," spangled, +17 × 13 6 16 0 + +Another on satin, birds on gold and silver, +13 × 13 (Harris) 13 13 6 + +A bead picture, 15 × 11 11 11 0 + +A stump and bead picture, 12 × 11 12 1 6 + +A small book-cover, 14 × 8 13 12 0 + +A Stuart stump picture, figures and silver +fountain, tortoiseshell frame, 22 × 16 15 15 0 + +A stump picture, lady with coral necklace, +18 × 12 23 10 0 + +A stump picture, lady under arch with a +black swan, 20 × 16 (Stoner) 34 0 0 + +A stump picture, King Charles as Ahasuerus +with Haman and Mordecai, and pearl-embroidered +carpet, 23 × 17 28 0 0 + +A stump picture, lady under a canopy, large +pearls, 13 × 19, (Stoner) 34 0 0 + +A Stuart Petit Point picture, Abraham and +Hagar 16 16 0 + +A Stuart petit point picture, "Judgment of +Paris," 24 × 17 25 0 0 + +A Stuart petit point picture, King Solomon +and Queen of Sheba 18 18 0 + +A beadwork picture, lady and gentleman, lion +and unicorn, 21 × 17 12 12 6 + +An embroidered picture, "Peter denying +Christ," 24 × 17 (S. G. Fenton) 9 19 6 + +A petit point picture, lake with boats and +figures, 15 × 12 (Harris) 14 14 6 + +A large stump picture, with horse and rider +and figures of four seasons 30 10 0 + +A stumpwork picture, four figures, castle +and birds and flowers (S. G. Fenton) 33 0 0 + +A picture sketched on white satin, not worked 4 15 0 + +A Stuart picture on canvas 9 19 6 + +A fine Stuart jewel-casket, numerous secret +drawers, covered in needlework (S. G. Fenton) 47 5 0 + +A Stuart box, covered with bullion-work +(S. G. Fenton) 12 12 0 + +A Stuart box, with embroidery and pearls +(Spero) 16 16 0 + +A Stuart box, coloured bullion, 10 × 6 9 9 0 + +An embroidered box, with portrait on lid +(S. G. Fenton) 53 11 0 + +A Stuart mirror, covered with stump +embroidery, representing Charles I. and his +Queen (illustrated), (Rosthron) 102 18 0 + +Another mirror, with painted and embroidered +figures (Harris) 34 0 0 + +A Charles I. mirror in old lace and gold +frame, with borders in embroidery, with +portrait, castle, and floral decoration 40 0 0 + +3 yds. 13 inches long, 12 inches deep, +Cornice in Petit Point, Christie's, +July, 1908 (Harris) 204 15 0 + + + + +XV + +CONCLUSION + + + + +XV + +CONCLUSION + + +Needlework as a national art is as dead as the proverbial door-nail; +whether or not it ever regains its position as a craft is a matter of +conjecture. Personally, I incline to the belief that it is absolutely +extinct. The death-knell rang for all time when the sewing-machine was +invented. The machine has been a very doubtful blessing, as it has +allowed even the art of stitchery in ordinary work to slide into the +limbo of forgotten things. What woman now knows what it is to +"back-stitch" a shirt cuff, for instance, drawing a thread for guidance, +and carefully going back two or three threads in order to make a neat, +firm line of stitching? The sewing-machine does all this, and _does_ it +_well_, a clever machinist turning out more work in a week than a +seamstress in a year. If this were all, it would be no matter for +regret, but with the necessity for needlework has vanished the desire. +The lady quoted in Green's History is now non-existent. "She was a +pattern of sobriety unto many, very seldom seen abroad except at +church; when others recreated themselves at holidays and other times, +she would take her needlework, and say, 'Here is my recreation.'" + +In spite of the many Schools of Embroidery, with a few notable +exceptions, nothing is done to raise the standard of embroidery above +making miserable little cushion-covers, table-centres, and suchlike +pretty fripperies for the temporary adornment of the house. The women of +Germany, Holland, Sweden, Italy, on the contrary, take a great interest +in the embroidery of the bed and table linen and the really artistic +embroidery of their national costumes. Nothing of this is seen in +England. Table linen is bought _ready hemmed_ at the shop. Dainty +tea-cloths and serviettes are purchased ready embroidered (by machine) +and trimmed with machine-made lace. Even _lingerie_ of all classes is +machine-made and bought by the dozen, instead of being made by the +daughters of the house. + +The only hope of a revival lies in the various Art schools in the +country where designing for fine embroidery and lace is encouraged. +Unfortunately, however, equal facilities are offered for designing of +machine-made imitations. The Royal School of Needlework, not being a +Government institution, offers no encouragement to outsiders. It is in +the hands of a number of ladies, who manage it as they will; and +although very fine work is accomplished, they trust too much to modern +designers and artists who work out their own pet theories and hobbies. +If only they would put aside all theories and new ideas, and _go back_ +to the best periods of English art both for their designs and execution, +even yet, with the intelligent use of the glorious examples in the +adjoining Museum, much might be done to revivify this expiring art. + +FINIS + + + + +INDEX + + + + +INDEX + + +OLD LACE. (_For Needlework see page 384_) + + +A + +Adelaide, Queen, 116 + +Age of lace, 108, 191 + +Alençon lace, 29, 78, 183, 191 + +Argentan lace, 29, 78, 191 + +Argentella lace, 29, 81, 192 + +Anne, Queen, 157 + +Appliqué, 175 + +Aylesbury, 158 + + +B + +Baby lace, 157 + +Barri, Madame du, 90 + +Beading, 41 + +Beads on bobbins, 161 + +Bed furnishing, 73 + +Bedfordshire lace, 37, 157 + +Belgian lace, 37 + +Black lace, 94 + +Blonde lace, 94 + +Bone lace, 41 + +Bobbins, 41, 158 + +Bolckow, Mrs., 54 + +Brides, 38, 127 + +Brussels lace, 37, 81, 104, 108, 123, 195 + +Brussels appliqué, 123 + +Brussels Vrai Reseau, 111 + +Buckinghamshire lace, 30, 35, 157, 158, 161 + +Burano, 54, 81 + +Buttonhole stitch, 195 + + +C + +Caen lace, 97 + +Carrick-ma-cross, 175 + +Catherine de Medici, 73 + +Chantilly lace, 37, 93 + +Charles I., 148 + +Charles II., 104, 148, 151 + +Charlotte, Queen, 161 + +Christie's sale-room, 115, 201 + +Colbert, 29, 73, 77, 102 + +Collar lace, 61 + +Collar, Medici, 53 + +Commonwealth, 148 + +Cordonnet, 41, 53, 77 + +Convents, 26 + +Coptic embroideries, 21 + +Couronnes, 41 + +Cravat, 151 + +Creevy Papers, 115 + +Cromwell, 151 + +Crotchet, 175 + +Cut worke, 73, 187 + +Cuthbert, St., 22 + + +D + +Danish lace, 134 + +Darned netting, 173 + +Debenham & Storr's sale-room, 54, 200 + +Dentelé, 41 + +Devonshire lace, 30, 162 + +Dorsetshire lace, 161 + +Drawn work, 21 + +Duchesse lace, 127 + +Durham Cathedral, 22 + + +E + +Ecclesiastical lace, 62 + +Edgings, 31 + +Edward IV., 144 + +Egyptian netting, 22 + +Elizabeth, Queen of England, 54, 147 + +Embroidered net, 172 + +English laces, 157 + +Empress Eugénie, 97 + + +F + +Falling collar, 148 + +Fausse Valenciennes, 89 + +Fillings, 40, 173 + +"Figure" motifs, 107 + +Flanders lace, 29, 103 + +Flat point (point plat), 50 + +Flax thread, 61, 107 + +Florence, 53 + +Flemish point, 103 + +Fond, 42 + +Fontange, 151 + +Fowler, Mrs., of Honiton, 166 + +France, point de, 74 + +French Revolution, 78 + + +G + +Genoese lace, 29 + +George I., 115 + +George II., 115 + +George III., 115 + +George IV., 112 + +German laces, 134 + +Ghent laces, 124 + +Gingles, 161 + +Gold and silver laces, 134 + +Greek laces, 103, 183 + +Groppo, Punto a, 62 + +Gros, Point de Venise, 53 + +Grounds, 37 + +Guipure, 42, 61 + +Gold lace, 22 + + +H + +Hamilton lace, 171 + +"Hayward's," 114 + +Henry VII., 144 + +Henry VIII., 147 + +High Wycombe, 158 + +History of lace, 21 + +Honiton, 30, 35, 165 + +Honiton appliqué, 30 + +Huguenots, 30 + + +I + +Identification of lace, 183 + +Irish lace, 30, 172, 176, 192 + +Italian lace, 45 + + +J + +James I., 148 + +James II., 151 + +Jours, 41, 81 + + +K + +Kenmare, Lady, 75 + +King of Rome, 112 + + +L + +"Lacis," 29, 73 + +Lappets, 112 + +Lawn, 93 + +Lewis Hill, Mrs., 201 + +Lille, 35, 91 + +Limerick, 124, 172 + +L'Onray, 76 + +Louis XIV., 29, 46, 73, 74 + +Louis XV., 78 + +Lyme Regis, 162 + + +M + +Machine-made ground, 172 + +Macramé, 37, 64 + +Malines, 127 + +Maltese, 137 + +Mantillas, 97 + +Marie Antoinette, 78, 123, 129 + +Massey-Mainwaring, Mrs., 200 + +Marie de Medici, 53 + +Marie Stuart, 171 + +Mary, Queen, 147 + +Mary II., 151, 152 + +Mechlin, 37, 127 + +Medici collar, 53 + +Mezzo Punto, 62 + +Milanese lace, 29, 62 + +Mixed lace, 37, 62, 124 + +Modern point lace, 124 + +Montespan, Madame de, 74 + + +N + +Napoleon I., 78, 112 + +National Library, S.K.M., 50 + +Needlepoint lace, 49, 73, 108 + +Network, ancient, 3 + +Newport Pagnell, 158 + +Normandy lace, 97 + +Norway, 134 + +Northamptonshire lace, 157 + +Nuns, 26 + + +O + +Oeil de perdrix, 83, 192 + +Origin of lace, 21 + + +P + +Palliser, Mrs. Bury, 9 + +Parchment, 25 + +Parasole, 50 + +Pearls, 97 + +Peter the Great, 134 + +Picots, 42 + +Pillow lace, 29, 37 + +Point lace, 25, 37 + +Point à réseau, 53 + +Point d'Aiguille (Brussels), 108 + +Point d'Alençon, 76 + +Point d'Angleterre, 102, 107, 192 + +Point appliqué, 123 + +Point de France, 46, 76, 188 + +Point de Gaze, 108, 124 + +Point de Venise, 49 + +Point de Venise Gros, 50, 53, 54 + +Point de Neige, 49, 50 + +Point plat, 50 + +Punto in aria, 25, 143 + +Punto a groppo, 37, 62 + +Punto tagliato a foliami, 53 + + +Q + +Quillings, 128 + +Quentin Matys, 103 + +Queen Anne, 157 + +Queen Mary II., 117, 127, 151 + +Queen Charlotte, 117, 128 + +Queen of Laces, 128 + +Queen Victoria, 116, 162 + + +R + +Raised stars, 49 + +Rose point, 49, 50 + +Renaissance, 53, 107, 188 + +Reseau, 36, 39 + +Reticella, 26, 50, 73, 103, 143, 188 + +Revolution, French, 78 + +Rococo, 78 + +Royal trousseaux, 81 + +Ruffles, 90 + +Russian lace, 134 + + +S + +St. Cuthbert, 22 + +Sale prices, 199 + +Samplers, 25, 187 + +Saxony lace, 134 + +Scotch lace, 171 + +Silk lace, 94 + +Smocks, 25 + +Spanish point, 133 + +Steinkirk, 151 + +Sumptuary law, 112 + +South Kensington Museum, 187 + + +T + +Tambour lace, 172 + +Tape lace, 62 + +Tatting, 175 + +Thread, 61 + +Toilé, 108 + +Trolly lace, 165 + + +V + +Valenciennes lace, 37, 89 + +Vandyke, 61, 148 + +Venice, 183 + +Vicellio, 50 + +Venetian lace, 50 + +Victoria, Queen, 162, 165 + +Vinciolo, 29, 50 + +Vraie Valenciennes, 89, 90 + + +W + +Westminster effigies, 147, 151, 152 + +William and Mary, 148, 151 + +"Wynyards," 115 + +William III., 115 + +Wiltshire lace, 115 + +Willis's Rooms, 201 + + +Y + +Youghal laces, 176 + + +NEEDLEWORK + + +A + +Athelstan, 213 + +Alb, 238 + +Aldhelm, Bishop of Sherborne, 213 + +Aelfled, Queen of Edward the Elder, 213 + +Angelica Kauffmann, 339 + +Art, the pioneer, 209 + +Ascagni cope, 223 + +Ascoli cope, 233 + + +B + +Bags, Stuart, 261 + +Bayeux tapestry, 214 + +Beads, Venetian, 274 + +Berlin wool pictures, 350 + +Bishop Fridhestan, 213 + +Black work, 284 + +Bologna cope, 223 + +Book-covers, 279 + +Bridgettine nuns, 227 + + +C + +Catworth cushions, 233 + +Catherine of Aragon, 248, 251, 284 + +Caskets, 269 + +Chain stitch, 227 + +Charles I., 265, 273 + +Charles II., 265, 273 + +Chasubles, 241 + +Christie's sale-rooms, 257, 265, 270, 367 + +City palls, 237 + +Church vestments, 238 + +Coventry, 228 + +Copes, 241 + +Crewel work, 329 + + +D + +Daroca cope at Madrid, 223 + +Dr. Rock, 227 + + +E + +Earl of Shrewsbury, 228 + +Editha, Queen of Edward the Confessor, 213 + +Egyptian embroidery, 210 + +Emma, Queen of Ethelred the Unready, 213 + +Elizabeth's wardrobe, 249 + +Elizabeth's Book at British Museum, 283 + +Elizabeth's Book at the Bodleian Library, 283 + +Elizabeth Hinde's Sampler, 309 + +Elizabeth Mackett's Sampler, 311 + + +F + +Field of the Cloth of Gold, 249 + + +G + +Georgian costumes, 363 + +Georgian pictures, 335 + +Gimps, 249 + +Gloves, 262, 265 + +Greek garments, 359 + + +H + +Hampton Court, 250, 322 + +Hair and silk pictures, 343 + +Henrietta Maria, Queen, 265 + +Henry VIII., 247 + +Höchon collection, 220 + + +I + +Isleworth, 227 + +Italian raised work, 295 + + +J + +James I., 257 + +Jacobean hangings, 321 + +"Jesse" Cope, 223 + +John Taylor's Needlework Rhyme, 258 + + +L + +Lady Jane Grey, 247 + +"Laid," or couch work, 227 + +Linwood, Miss, 350 + + +M + +Maniple, 241 + +Mary Queen of Scots, 250 + +Mary II. embroidery, 325 + +Minerva, 358 + +Mirror frames, 273 + + +N + +Needlework pictures, 291, 335, 349 + +Neolithic remains, 210 + +"Nevil" altar-frontal, 234 + + +O + +Opus Anglicum, or Anglicanum, 219, 223 + + +P + +"Painted face" picture, 335, 343 + +Petit point, 257, 325 + +Phoenicians, 359 + +Phrygian embroidery, 358 + +Pierpont Morgan, 233 + +Pocket books, 281 + +Pope Innocent III., 223 + + +Q + +Quilting, 287 + + +R + +Reformation, 246 + +Roman Invasion, 210 + +Royal School of Needlework, 353 + +Rock's "Church of Our Fathers," 220 + + +S + +Samplers, 307 + +St. Augustine, 210 + +St. Benedict, 220 + +St. Cuthbert, 213 + +St. Dunstan, 213 + +Steeple Aston altar-frontal, 234 + +Stoles, 238 + +Stump work, 295 + +Stump work symbols, 302 + +"Syon" cope, 223 + +Subjects of needle pictures, 295 + + +T + +Tambour stitch, 227 + +Tudor embroideries, 247 + +Trays, 270 + + +W + +Wonderful needlewoman, A, 351 + +Wolsey, Cardinal, 249, 250 + +Wolseley's, Lady, collection, 265, 273, 368 + +Worcester fragments, 219 + + +_Printed in Great Britain by_ +UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's Note: + +Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected. + +Inconsistent hyphenation in the original has been preserved, e.g. +cutwork, cut-work; hand-made, handmade; lace-workers, laceworkers; +may-flower, mayflower; needle-craft, needlecraft; needle-point, +needlepoint; salerooms, sale-rooms; semi-circular, semicircular. + +Inconsistent use of accents has been preserved, e.g. applique, appliqué; +réseau, reseau; toile, toilé. + +In the Index, Pierpoint was corrected to Pierpont to match the body of +the text. + +The main body of the text refers to the "Hockon collection", which is +referred to in the index as the "Höchon collection". It is unclear which +of these is correct so they have been preserved as they appear in the +original. + +Page 25: 'survival of the fitting' changed to 'survival of the fittest'. + +Page 38: 'accompanying diagrams' changed to 'accompanying diagram'. + +Page 42: 'little loop' changed to 'little loops'. + +Page 127: '"Duchesse point" of "Bruges,"' changed to '"Duchesse point" +or "Bruges,"'. + +Page 192: 'of same period' changed to 'of the same period'. + +Page 196: 'other two' changed to 'two other'. + +Page 300: 'and rose of England' changed to 'and the rose of England'. + +Page 303: 'and butterfly was' changed to 'and butterfly were'. + +Page 315: 'a long narrow Samplers' changed to 'a long narrow Sampler'. + +Page 383: 'Punto à groppo' changed to 'Punto a groppo'. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK*** + + +******* This file should be named 26120-8.txt or 26120-8.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/1/2/26120 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre> +<p>Title: Chats on Old Lace and Needlework</p> +<p>Author: Emily Leigh Lowes</p> +<p>Release Date: July 24, 2008 [eBook #26120]</p> +<p>Language: English</p> +<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p> +<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK***</p> +<p> </p> +<h3>E-text prepared by Susan Skinner<br /> + and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br /> + (http://www.pgdp.net)</h3> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" /> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<p> </p> + +<h1 style="text-align: left;">CHATS ON OLD LACE<br /> +AND NEEDLEWORK</h1> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>BOOKS FOR COLLECTORS</h2> + +<p style="text-align: center;"><i>With Frontispieces and many Illustrations<br /> +Large Crown 8vo, cloth.</i></p> + +<p> +<b>CHATS ON ENGLISH CHINA.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Hayden</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD FURNITURE.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Hayden</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD PRINTS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">(How to collect and value Old Engravings.)</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Hayden</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON COSTUME.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">G. Woolliscroft Rhead</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">E. L. Lowes</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON ORIENTAL CHINA.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">J. F. Blacker</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD MINIATURES.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">J. J. Foster</span>, F.S.A.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON ENGLISH EARTHENWARE.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Hayden</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON AUTOGRAPHS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">A. M. Broadley</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON PEWTER.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">H. J. L. J. Massé</span>, M.A.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON POSTAGE STAMPS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Fred. J. Melville</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD JEWELLERY AND TRINKETS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">MacIver Percival</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON COTTAGE AND FARMHOUSE FURNITURE.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Hayden</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD COINS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Fred. W. Burgess</span></span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD COPPER AND BRASS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Fred. W. Burgess</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON HOUSEHOLD CURIOS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Fred. W. Burgess</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD SILVER.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Hayden</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON JAPANESE PRINTS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Davison Ficke</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON MILITARY CURIOS.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Stanley C. Johnson</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON OLD CLOCKS AND WATCHES.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Hayden</span>.</span><br /> +<br /> +<b>CHATS ON ROYAL COPENHAGEN PORCELAIN.</b><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">By <span class="smcap">Arthur Hayden</span>.</span><br /> +</p> + +<p style="text-align: center;">LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN, LTD.<br /> +NEW YORK: F. A. STOKES COMPANY</p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a>{3}</span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 366px;"><a name="frontispiece" id="frontispiece"></a> +<img src="images/image001.jpg" width="366" height="500" alt="Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke." title="" /> +<span class="caption smcap">Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke.</span> +</div> + +<p class='center'>MARY SIDNEY, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE.</p> + +<p class='center'>Born about 1555. Died 1621.<br /> +Buried at Salisbury Cathedral.<br /> +Painted probably by <span class="smcap">Marc Gheeraedts</span>.</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Underneath this sable hearse<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Lies the subject of all verse.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Sidney's sister, Pembroke's mother.<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Death! ere thou hast slain another<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Fair and learn'd and good as she,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Time shall throw a dart at thee!"<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<h1 style="color: red;"> +<span class="smcap">Chats on Old Lace<br /> +and Needlework</span></h1> +<p class='center'> +BY<br /> +<br /> +<span style="font-size: x-large;">MRS. LOWES<br /></span> +<br /> +WITH 76 ILLUSTRATIONS<br /> +<br /> +LONDON<br /> +<span style="color: red;">T. FISHER UNWIN, LTD.<br /></span> +ADELPHI TERRACE<br /> +</p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<p class='center'> +<i>First Impression 1908</i><br /> +<i>Second Impression 1912</i><br /> +<i>Third Impression 1919</i><br /> +<br /> +[<i>All rights reserved.</i>]<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">{7}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2> + + +<p>This little book has been compiled to emphasise +and accentuate the distinct awakening of English +women and Needlecraft Artists to the beauty of +the ancient laces and embroideries which we own +in the magnificent historic collections in our great +public Museums.</p> + +<p>We are fortunate in possessing in the Victoria +and Albert Museum monumental specimens of both +lace and needlework. Among the sumptuous lace +collection there are most perfect specimens of the +art of lace-making, and priceless pieces of historic +embroidery made when England was first and foremost +in the world in the production of Ecclesiastical +embroidery.</p> + +<p>The lace collection particularly, without compare, +is illustrative of all that is best in this delightful +art, being specially rich in magnificent pieces that +can never be again obtained. These have mostly +been given, or left as legacies, to the Museum by +collectors and enthusiasts who have made this +fascinating hobby the quest of their lives. In<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">{8}</a></span> +addition to the collection formed by the generosity +of the donors, the authorities have exercised a +very catholic judgment in selecting the choicest +and most illustrative examples of the lace-maker's +craft.</p> + +<p>In the section devoted to embroideries, more +particularly English (as it is with our own country's +needlework I propose to deal), nothing more glorious +in the Nation's art records can be found than the +masterpieces of embroidery worked by the great +ladies, the abbesses and nuns of the Mediæval +period. In almost every other branch of art England +has been equalled, if not excelled, by Continental +craftsmen; but in this one instance, up to the +Reformation, English work was sought after far +and wide, and as <i>opus Anglicum</i> formed part of +church furnishing and priestly vestments in every +great cathedral in Italy, Spain, and France.</p> + +<p>It cannot be too soon realised that, as with old +furniture, porcelain, and silver, much of the finest +embroideries of England, and a vast quantity of the +ancient laces of Italy, France, and Belgium are being +slowly but surely carried off to the New World. +American dollars are doing much to rob not only +the Old Country of the fairest flowers of her garden, +but the Continent of their finest and best examples +of the genius of the past. The Vanderbilts and the +Astors, among others, possess immense fortunes in +lace, whilst that omnivorous collector Mr. J. Pierpont +Morgan gives fabulous sums for any fine old relic +of embroidery. Many pieces of both classes of +needlecraft have found a permanent home in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">{9}</a></span> +Metropolitan Museum of New York, and are lost +for ever to the English student.</p> + +<p>It is, therefore, a pleasant duty to add my little +quota of information to the study of these fascinating +and exquisite branches of fine art which so specially +appeal to all women by their dainty grace and delightful +handicraft. I hope I may arouse some little +enthusiasm in my countrywomen in the study of the +past glories of both subjects, and in the possibility of +once again becoming first and foremost in the latter +branch.</p> + +<p>I beg to acknowledge the pleasure and help I have +received from the perusal of the late Mrs. Bury +Palliser's exhaustive "History of Lace," and Lady +Alford's "History of Needlework," and Dr. Rock's +invaluable books on "Ecclesiastical Embroidery."</p> + +<p style="text-align: right;"> +EMILY LEIGH LOWES.</p> +<p> +<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 2em;">Hillcrest</span>,<br /> +<span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 4em;">Brixton Hill</span>,<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 6em;">S.W.</span><br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">{10}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="BIBLIOGRAPHY" id="BIBLIOGRAPHY"></a>BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2> + + +<h3>LACE.</h3> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>The History of Lace. 1 vol. Mrs. Bury Palliser. Sampson, +Marston & Low. 1865. £2 2s.</p> + +<p>Dentelles and Guipures. 1 vol. E. Lefebure. Grevil. 1888.</p> + +<p>Ancient Needlepoint and Pillow Lace. Alan Sumnerly Cole. +London. 1873.</p> + +<p>The Queen Lace Book. London. 1874.</p> + +<p>Of Lace. Alan Sumnerly Cole. 1893.</p> + +<p>Point and Pillow Lace. A. M. Sharp. George Newnes & Co. +7s. 6d.</p> + +<p>Venice and Burano. Ancient and Modern Lace. M. Jesuram. +Venice. 1883.</p> + +<p>The History of Handmade Lace. Mrs. Jackson. Upcott Gill & +Son. 1900. 18s.</p> + +<p>Seven Centuries of Lace. Mrs. Hungerford-Pollen. 1st vol. +issued 1908.</p></div> + + +<h3>NEEDLEWORK.</h3> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Textile Fabrics. Dr. Daniel Rock. South Kensington Handbook +Series. 1876. 1s.</p> + +<p>Needlework as Art. Lady Marion Alford. London. 1886. £4 4s.</p> + +<p>English Embroidery. A.F. Kendrick. George Newnes & Co. +7s. 6d.</p> + +<p>Art in Needlework. Day & Buckle. Batsford. 7s. 6d.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">{11}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>PAGE</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#PREFACE">PREFACE</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#BIBLIOGRAPHY">BIBLIOGRAPHY</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_10">10</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='center' colspan='2'><a href="#CHATS_ON_OLD_LACE">OLD LACE</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>CHAPTER</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_I">I. A BRIEF HISTORY OF LACE</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_II">II. THE ART OF LACE-MAKING</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_III">III. THE LACES OF ITALY</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_45">45</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_IV">IV. THE LACES OF GENOA AND MILAN</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_57">57</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_V">V. THE LACES OF FRANCE: NEEDLEPOINT</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_VI">VI. THE LACES OF FRANCE: PILLOW</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_VII">VII. THE LACES OF FLANDERS</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_VIII">VIII. MODERN BRUSSELS AND MECHLIN</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_IX">IX. OTHER CONTINENTAL LACES</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_X">X. A SHORT HISTORY OF LACE IN ENGLAND</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_XI">XI. ENGLISH LACES</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_XII">XII. SCOTCH AND IRISH LACE</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_XIII">XIII. HOW TO IDENTIFY LACE</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_179">179</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">{12}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#L_XIV">XIV. SALE PRICES</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='center' colspan='2'><a href="#CHATS_ON_NEEDLEWORK">NEEDLEWORK</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>CHAPTER</td><td align='right'>PAGE</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_I">I. OLD ENGLISH EMBROIDERY</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_II">II. THE GREAT PERIOD</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_III">III. ECCLESIASTICAL EMBROIDERIES AND VESTMENTS</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_229">229</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_IV">IV. TUDOR EMBROIDERIES</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_245">245</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_V">V. EARLY NEEDLEWORK PICTURES AND ACCESSORIES</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_VI">VI. STUART CASKETS AND MIRROR</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_267">267</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_VII">VII. EMBROIDERED BOOKS AND "BLACK WORK"</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_VIII">VIII. STUART PICTURES</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_IX">IX. SAMPLERS</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_305">305</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_X">X. THE WILLIAM AND MARY EMBROIDERIES</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_XI">XI. PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_331">331</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_XII">XII. NEEDLEWORK PICTURES OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_347">347</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_XIII">XIII. EMBROIDERY IN COSTUME</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_355">355</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_XIV">XIV. SALE PRICES</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_365">365</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><a href="#N_XV">XV. CONCLUSION</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_373">373</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>INDEX—<a href="#INDEX">OLD LACE</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_381">381</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left' style="text-indent: 4.5em;"><a href="#NEEDLEWORK_INDEX">NEEDLEWORK</a></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_384">384</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">{13}</a></span></td></tr> +</table></div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2> + + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'>MARY SIDNEY, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE</td><td align='left'><i><a href="#frontispiece">Frontispiece</a></i></td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>OLD LACE</td><td align='right'>PAGE</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EGYPTIAN CUT AND DRAWN WORK</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>OLD ITALIAN "CUTWORKE"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_20">20</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EARLY ENGLISH SAMPLERS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>ORIGINAL PATTERNS BY VINCIOLA</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>ORIGINAL DESIGNS OF RETICELLA EDGINGS BY VINCIOLA</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>CHART OF NEEDLEPOINT RÉSEAUX</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>CHART OF PILLOW RÉSEAUX</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>VENETIAN ROSE POINT</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>VENETIAN ROSE POINT COLLAR</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EXAMPLES OF FLAT VENETIAN POINT</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>MARIE DE MEDICIS WEARING VENETIAN POINT COLLAR</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EXAMPLE OF GROS POINT DE VENICE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>LOUIS XIII. WEARING GENOESE COLLAR LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_60">60</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">{14}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>GENOESE COLLAR LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>MILANESE LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>OLD ITALIAN AND FRENCH LACES AND CUT AND DRAWN WORK</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>"POINT DE FRANCE"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>POINT D'ALENÇON</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>"POINT DE FRANCE" AND D'ARGENTELLA</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>POINT D'ARGENTAN AND POINT D'ARGENTELLA</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>VALENCIENNES</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>"LILLE"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EMPRESS EUGENIE WEARING BLONDE LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>POINT D'ANGLETERRE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>POINT D'ANGLETERRE LAPPET</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>BRUSSELS LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>BRUSSELS LAPPET</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>COMTESSE D'ARTOIS WEARING BRUSSELS LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>MARIE ANTOINETTE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>MECHLIN LAPPET</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>MARIE ANTOINETTE WEARING MECHLIN LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>"DUCHESSE" LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>QUEEN ELIZABETH WEARING VENETIAN POINT RUFF AND CUFFS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_141">141</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">{15}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EDMUND SPENSER: COLLAR TRIMMED WITH RETICELLA</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_145">145</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>RETICELLA FALLING COLLAR</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>COLLAR OF GROS POINT</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>OLD BUCKINGHAM AND EARLY DEVONSHIRE LACES</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>OLD HONITON LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_163">163</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>MODERN HONITON LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>LIMERICK "FILLINGS"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>CARRICK-MA-CROSS LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>RETICELLA WITH GENOA BORDERS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>POINT D'ANGLETERRE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_185">185</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>ITALIAN ECCLESIASTICAL LACE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>BRUSSELS LAPPET</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>"POINT DE GAZE"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>NEEDLEWORK</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EGYPTIAN EMBROIDERY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>BAYEUX TAPESTRY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>KING HAROLD FROM BAYEUX TAPESTRY</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_215">215</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>FRAGMENT FROM THE "JESSE" COPE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_221">221</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>THE "SYON" COPE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>THE STEEPLE ASTON ALTAR FRONTAL</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_232">232</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>THE "NEVIL" ALTAR FRONTAL</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_235">235</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">{16}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>DIAGRAM SHOWING USE OF VESTMENTS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_239">239</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>SET OF ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>STUART GLOVE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>STUART MIRROR FRAME</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>STUART BOOK COVER</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_278">278</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>QUEEN ELIZABETH'S POCKET-BOOK</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_281">281</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>"BLACK WORK" CAP</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_285">285</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EMBROIDERY PORTRAIT OF KING CHARLES I.</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>STUMP-WORK PICTURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_297">297</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>"PETIT POINT" PICTURE WORKED ON SATIN</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_301">301</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A SEVENTEENTH CENTURY "SAMPLER"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_309">309</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_313">313</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>JACOBEAN HANGINGS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_319">319</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>ENLARGEMENT OF SPRAY FROM HANGINGS</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_323">323</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>QUEEN ANNE PICTURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_327">327</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EARLY GEORGIAN PICTURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>"THE LAST SUPPER"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_337">337</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SILK EMBROIDERED PICTURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_341">341</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>BLACK SILK AND HAIR PICTURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_345">345</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A "GAINSBOROUGH" PICTURE</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_361">361</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">{17}</a></span></td></tr> +</table></div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_I" id="L_I"></a>I<br /> +<br /> +A BRIEF<br /> +HISTORY<br /> +OF LACE</h2> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image002.jpg" width="500" height="288" alt="EGYPTIAN CUT AND DRAWN WORK. + +Found in a tomb in Thebes." title="" /> +<span class="caption">EGYPTIAN CUT AND DRAWN WORK. +<br /> +Found in a tomb in Thebes.</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image003.jpg" width="500" height="201" alt="OLD ITALIAN "CUTWORKE." + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">OLD ITALIAN "CUTWORKE." +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHATS_ON_OLD_LACE" id="CHATS_ON_OLD_LACE"></a>CHATS ON OLD LACE</h2> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>I<br /> +<br /> +A BRIEF HISTORY OF LACE</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Early vestiges in Egypt—Lace found in St. Cuthbert's Tomb +(685 <span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>)—Drawn Thread and Cutworks—Venetian Lace—Flanders +Lace—French Laces—English Lace.</p></div> + + +<p>In every other art or craft we can search the +history of ages and find some vestiges or beginnings +among the earlier civilisations. Possibly owing to +the exquisite fragility of Lace, there is a complete +absence of data earlier than that of Egypt. The +astonishing perfection in art handicrafts of all descriptions +which we find in China many hundreds of +years before the Christian era shows no vestiges of +a manufacture of lace; but, in the tombs of ancient +Egypt, garments have been discovered with the edges +frayed and twisted into what we may call a primitive +lace, and in some of the Coptic embroideries threads +have been drawn out at intervals and replaced with +those of coloured wools, making an uncouth but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</a></span> +striking design. Netting must have been understood, +as many of the mummies found at Thebes and +elsewhere are discovered wearing a net to hold or +bind the hair; and also, a fine network, interspersed +with beads, is often discovered laid over the breast, +sometimes having delightful little blue porcelain +deities strung amongst their meshes.</p> + +<p>These early vestiges, however, are in no way representative +of the later exquisite fabrics which we now +know and recognise as Lace. Far nearer to them, as +an art, are the early gold and silver laces of simple +design found amongst the tombs of Mycenæ and +Etruria, and those of a later date—<i>i.e.</i>, the laces of +gold used to decorate the vestments of the clergy, +and the simple but sumptuous gowns of the Middle +Ages. Along with the stole and maniple of St. +Cuthbert, which are now at Durham Cathedral, was +found a piece of detached gold lace, which must have +formed a separate trimming. St. Cuthbert died in +685 <span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>, and was buried at Lindisfarne, his body +being afterwards transferred to Durham to save it +from the desecration of the Danes who were ravaging +the land. Over the body was a cloth, or sheet, which +was worked in cutworks and fringes, showing that +even at so early a date initial efforts at lace-making +had been attempted.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image004.jpg" width="500" height="323" alt="EARLY ENGLISH SAMPLERS, SHOWING CUT AND DRAWN WORK." title="" /> +<img src="images/image005.jpg" width="500" height="336" alt="" title="" /> +<span class="caption">EARLY ENGLISH SAMPLERS, SHOWING CUT AND DRAWN WORK. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M. Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>As far as we can gather, the earliest endeavour at +lace-making originated with the drawing of threads +in linen fabrics, then dividing the existing threads into +strands, and working over them, in various fanciful +designs, either with a buttonhole stitch or simply +a wrapping stitch. Exactly this method is used at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">{25}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a></span> +the present day, and is known as hem-stitching and +fine-drawing. A later development suggested, apparently, +cutting away of some of the threads, their +place being supplied with others placed angularly or +in circles. Many delightful examples of the work +are to be seen in our Old English samplers of the +sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and even so +recently as thirty years ago specimens of this primitive +and early lace-making were to be seen in the +quaint "smock-frock" of the English farm labourer, +a garment which, though discarded by the wearer +in favour of the shoddy products of the Wakefield +looms, is now deemed worthy of a place in the +collector's museum.</p> + +<p>It required little effort of fancy and skill, by the +simple process of evolution and survival of the +fittest, to expand this plan of cutting away threads +and replacing them with others to doing away +<i>entirely</i> with existing and attached threads, and +supplying the whole with a pattern of threads laid +down on some geometric fashion on a backing of +parchment, <i>working over</i> and <i>connecting</i> the patterns +together, and afterwards liberating the entire work +from the parchment, thereby making what was known +at the time as "punto in aria," or working with the +needle-point in the air, literally "<i>out of nothing</i>."</p> + +<p>Strange as this may appear, this was the origin, +in the fifteenth century, of the whole wonderful fabric +which afterwards became known as "Point lace," +which altered and even revolutionised dress, made +life itself beautiful, and supplied the women of Europe +with a livelihood gained in an easy, artistic, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">{26}</a></span> +delightful manner. It also, however, led to ruinous +expenditure in every country, at times requiring +special edicts to restrain its extravagance, and even +the revival of the old Sumptuary laws to repress it.</p> + +<p>The earliest known lace, and by far the most +popular with all classes, was "Reticella," which was +the first kind evolved on the "punto in aria" principle. +Until the discovery of an easy and simple way +of decorating the linen ruffs and cuffs of the period +these had been quite plain, as many contemporary +portraits show. Afterwards the fashion of trimming +garments of all descriptions with the pointed wiry +edges of Venice became a mania, and led to imitation +in almost every country of Europe. The convents +turned out an immense quantity, thereby +adding enormously to the incomes of their establishments. +It is assumed that it is to the nuns +of Italy we owe the succeeding elaboration of +Reticella, "Needlepoint," the long, placid hours +spent in the quiet convent gardens, lending themselves +to the refinement and delicacy which this +exquisite fabric made necessary. However this may +be, it is certain that in a few years the rise and +development of Needlepoint lace-making was little +short of phenomenal, and every convent was busy +making it and teaching their poorer lay sisters the +art. Some of the wonderful Old Point of this period +is absolutely finer than the naked eye can see, a +powerful magnifying glass being necessary to discern +how the marvellous "toile" or "gimpe" is made.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">{27}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image006.jpg" width="500" height="536" alt="ORIGINAL PATTERNS DESIGNED BY VINCIOLA. + +Seventeenth Century." title="" /> +<span class="caption">ORIGINAL PATTERNS DESIGNED BY VINCIOLA. +<br /> +Seventeenth Century.</span> +</div> + +<p>A little later, but still contemporary with the introduction +of Venetian lace, a Pillow lace was being<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">{29}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a></span> +made in Flanders, the origin of which is not as yet +discovered. It is possible that the fine flax thread +grown and manufactured there may, at the time of +weaving, have suggested a looser and more ornamental +material, but that remains a matter of conjecture. +There must, however, have been an interchange +of examples, as about this time Pillow-made +lace appeared in Italy, and led to the making of +the Milanese and Genoese varieties, and Needlepoint +motifs appeared amongst the woven network of +Flanders.</p> + +<p>Lace, under the name of "Lacis," had been known +in France from the time of Catherine de Medici, who +patronised the manufacturers and used it lavishly. +About 1585 she induced Federico di Vinciolo, a +lace-maker and designer of Venice, to settle in +France, and there the making of Venetian lace was +attempted. A mere slavish imitation of the Venetian +school resulted, and it was not until the age of the +<i>Grande Monarque</i>, Louis XIV., that French lace +rivalled that of Venice.</p> + +<p>Colbert, the great French Minister, becoming +alarmed at the enormous sums spent on Italian +lace, determined to put a check to its importation; +and, by forbidding its use, establishing lace +schools near Alençon, and bribing Italian workers +to come over as organisers and teachers, started +the manufacture of lace on an extensive scale, the +beautiful fabrics known as Point d'Alençon, Point +d'Argentan, and Point d'Argentella being the result. +It is frequently said that the last-named lace came +from Genoa or Milan, but most of the present-day<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">{30}</a></span> +authorities agree that this is one of the many fairy +tales with which the passing of time has adorned +the history of lace.</p> + +<p>The persecution of the Protestants when the +Huguenots fled to England, bringing with them their +arts of silk-weaving and lace-making, led to the +introduction of English lace. Devonshire apparently +received a contingent of laceworkers quite distinct +from those who settled in Buckinghamshire and +Bedfordshire, and from the first stages showed far +finer methods and designs. With the exception of +"Old Honiton," England cannot boast of anything +very fine, and even this is merely a meaningless +meandering of woven tape-like design for the greater +part. The lace of Buckinghamshire ranks, perhaps, +lowest in the scale of lace products, its only merit +being its extreme durability.</p> + +<p>The laces of Ireland are of comparatively recent +growth, and though in many instances exquisitely +fine, do not as yet show much originality.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">{31}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image007.jpg" width="500" height="350" alt="ORIGINAL PATTERNS DESIGNED BY VINCIOLA." title="" /> +<span class="caption">ORIGINAL PATTERNS DESIGNED BY VINCIOLA.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_II" id="L_II"></a>II<br /> +<br /> +THE ART OF<br /> +LACE-MAKING</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">{36}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a></span></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image008.jpg" width="400" height="438" alt="NEEDLEPOINT RÉSEAUX." title="" /> +<span class="caption">NEEDLEPOINT RÉSEAUX. +<br /> +No. 1.—Brussels.<br /> +No. 2.—Alençon.<br /> +No. 3.—Argentan.<br /> +No. 4.—Argentella.<br /> +</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>II +<br /> +THE ART OF LACE-MAKING</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Needlepoint—Pillow Laces—Charts of various Réseaux—Technical +Terms.</p></div> + + +<p>Lace-making naturally falls into two classes—the +Needlepoint and Pillow varieties. In some laces, +more especially of the Belgian class, there is a <i>mixed</i> +lace, the "toile" or pattern, being worked with the +needle, and the ground, or "réseau," made round it +on the pillow and <i>vice versâ</i>.</p> + +<p>To the first-named class we must assign the +Needlepoint laces of Italy and the exquisite handmade +laces of France. To the latter order belong +the early Macramé lace, called "Punto a Groppo"; +the Genoese and Milanese laces of Italy; Mechlin +and Brussels of Belgium; Valenciennes, Lille, and +Chantilly of France; and the English laces of +Honiton, Buckinghamshire, and Bedfordshire.</p> + +<p>Pillow lace may be easily distinguished from +Point lace, as in the former the ground, or réseau, +is made of plaited threads. That of Point lace is +composed of threads made by the use of the button<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</a></span>hole +stitch only, or, in the case of Alençon point, +the mesh is worked in a special manner. The later +laces, <i>i.e.</i>, those made during the last hundred years, +have frequently a ground of machine lace, and thus, +strictly speaking, are not lace at all, but only embroideries +or appliqués. The machine-made ground +can be distinguished by sense of touch alone. If we +take a piece of hand-made net between the finger +and thumb and slightly roll it, it will gather +in a soft little roll, with the touch almost of floss +silk. The machine-made net is hard, stiff, and +wiry, and remains perceptibly so in this test. Also, +the mesh of machine-made lace is as regular as +though made with a fine machine fret-saw, that of +hand-made lace being of varying sizes, and often +following the pattern of the lace design.</p> + +<p>The accompanying diagram illustrates the various +grounds, and will prove an infallible guide in distinguishing +the points of difference between Point +and Pillow lace.</p> + +<p>Various special and technical terms are used in +describing the method of making lace. Without +burdening the reader too much, a few special terms +must be explained.</p> + +<p><i>Brides</i> (literally "bridges").—These are the connections +between the various parts of a lace design, +both in Needle-point and Bobbin lace. In the +former, they are made entirely of a strand or two +of thread thrown across, and then buttonholed over, +sometimes with tiny loops on the edges, and in +Venetian lace often having minute stars worked upon +them.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image009.jpg" width="400" height="426" alt="PILLOW RÉSEAUX." title="" /> +<span class="caption">PILLOW RÉSEAUX. +<br /> +No. 1.—Valenciennes.<br /> +No. 2.—Brussels.<br /> +No. 3.—Lille.<br /> +No. 4.—Mechlin.<br /></span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a></span></p> + +<p><i>Beading.</i>—A tiny looped edge used to finish woven +or Pillow-made lace.</p> + +<p><i>Bobbins.</i>—One of the essential parts of a Pillow +worker's outfit. These are small, elongated bobbins +made of ivory, bone, or wood, on which is wound the +lace-maker's thread. Sometimes they have been +made very ornamental with carving and other +decorations, and frequently have "gingles," or a +bunch of coloured beads attached to one end. The +terms "Bobbin lace" and "Bone lace" are derived +from these and are synonymous with "Pillow lace."</p> + +<p><i>Cordonnet.</i>—In most <i>Point</i> laces the design is +outlined with a raised <i>cord</i> either worked over +closely with buttonhole stitches, or made separately +and then stitched down. The Cordonnet is one of +the characteristic features of the raised Venetian +points and the French laces of Alençon or Argentan.</p> + +<p><i>Couronnes.</i>—These are decorations of the Cordonnet +especially noticeable in the raised Venetian laces, in +which sometimes the lace is raised and worked upon +no less than four separate times.</p> + +<p><i>Dentelé.</i>—Lace designed in scallop-form, chiefly +used for border laces.</p> + +<p><i>Fillings.</i>—This word most easily explains the +ordinary terms of "modes" and "à jours." The +inner parts of the pattern in Needlepoint and Pillow +lace are filled in with various ornamental stitches, +showing an amazing variety of design. By these +fillings various laces may often be distinguished, as +each factory had its favourite "modes."</p> + +<p><i>Grounds.</i>—There are two varieties of grounds, one +made with Brides, and the other either with Needle<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</a></span>point +or Pillow network. Other names for these are +"Réseaux" and "Fonds." The method of making +Needlepoint or woven ground often decides the date +and class of the lace.</p> + +<p><i>Guipure.</i>—Literally a <i>tape lace</i>. The name however +is applied to all Pillow laces having a tape-like +design on them.</p> + +<p><i>Picots.</i>—The little loops used to ornament a plain +bride or tie.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image010.jpg" width="400" height="589" alt="VENETIAN ROSE POINT." title="" /> +<span class="caption">VENETIAN ROSE POINT. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_III" id="L_III"></a>III<br /> +<br /> +THE LACES<br /> +OF ITALY</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a></span></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image011.jpg" width="500" height="365" alt="VENETIAN ROSE POINT. + +Seventeenth Century. (Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">VENETIAN ROSE POINT. +<br /> +Seventeenth Century. (<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>III +<br /> +THE LACES OF ITALY</h2> + +<h3><i>The Venetian Laces</i></h3> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Venetian lace—"Rose Point"—"Point de Neige"—"Gros +Point"—"Punto Tagliato a Foliami"—The South Kensington +Collection.</p></div> + + +<p>Needlepoint lace is made with needle and thread +and principally in buttonhole stitches. A traced +parchment pattern is procured, the outline made +with a solitary thread stitched down to the parchment +at frequent intervals. The thread is then +worked over with fine buttonhole stitches; the modes +or fillings have a fine network of threads stretched +across, afterwards being buttonholed into a variety of +designs. The edges are then again worked upon +with loops or picots, and in "Rose Point" tiny +stars or roses are worked on suitable parts of the +design, sometimes the "roses" or "stars" being +three in numbers, one poised upon the other. This +is known as "Point de Neige" the whole surface +of the lace being literally sprinkled with tiny stars<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</a></span> +somewhat representing a fine snowfall. The design +is then connected with fine "brides," these in their +turn being dotted and purled with stars and loops. +Most of this exquisite lace requires a powerful +magnifying-glass to discern the intricacy of the work.</p> + +<p>The finest lace of this variety was produced in the +sixteenth century, the designs being bold, handsome, +and purely Renaissance in type. That of the Louis +Quatorze period shows the personal influence of his +reign, frequently having tiny figures worked in the +design. A collar in my possession has the Indian +worshipping the sun (the King's glory was said to +rival that of the sun) repeated in each scallop. This +was a favourite design in the magnificent "Point de +France" which was made during the long reign of +Louis, under the management of Colbert.</p> + +<p>It is absolutely certain that the laces known as +Venetian Point originated in Italy. Pattern books +still exist showing how the early Reticella developed +into this magnificent lace. In the National Library at +the South Kensington Museum, may be seen the very +patterns designed by Vinciolo, Vicellio, and Isabella +Parasole. These publications actually came from +Venice, and being reproduced in France, Germany, +Belgium, and England, quickly aroused immense +enthusiasm, and lace-making spread far and wide, +at first all other laces being mere imitations of the +Venetian.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image012.jpg" width="500" height="235" alt="CORALLINE POINT (VENETIAN)." title="" /> +<span class="caption">CORALLINE POINT (VENETIAN).</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image013.jpg" width="500" height="589" alt="POINT PLAT DE VENISE (FLAT VENETIAN). + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">POINT PLAT DE VENISE (FLAT VENETIAN). +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image014.jpg" width="400" height="472" alt="MARIE DE MEDICIS WEARING THE MEDICIS COLLAR +TO DISPLAY VENETIAN LACES." title="" /> +<span class="caption">MARIE DE MEDICIS WEARING THE MEDICIS COLLAR +TO DISPLAY VENETIAN LACES.</span> +</div> + +<p>The chief varieties of the Venetian laces are known +as Rose Point, Point de Neige, Gros Point de Venise +(often erroneously attributed to Spain and called +Spanish Point), and Point Plat de Venise. A much<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</a></span> +rarer variety is "Venetian point à réseau," which is +the flat point worked round with a Needlepoint +ground or mesh, the network following no proper +order but being simply worked round the pattern and +following its curves.</p> + +<p>The chief characteristics of Venetian lace are the +buttonhole Cordonnet, fine or thick according to +the style of lace; the wonderful diversities of the +fillings worked in buttonhole stitches; the elaborate +decoration of the Cordonnet; and the starry effects of +the brides or ties. In the flat Venetian Point there +is no Cordonnet.</p> + +<p>These Italian laces were admired and purchased by +all the European countries, and the cities of Venice +and Florence made enormous fortunes. The fashions +of the day led to their extensive use, Marie de Medicis +introducing the Medici collar trimmed with Venetian +points specially to display them. At a little later period +the collar became more falling and the heavier "Gros +point" was used. Men and women alike wore lace-trimmed +garments to an excessive degree, the collar +and cuff trimmings being composed of wide Venetian +lace and the silken scarf worn across the body being +edged with narrower and finer lace.</p> + +<p>The principal designs for the Venetian lace of all +periods were scrolls of flowers conventionalised in the +Renaissance taste of the time. The generic name +for all laces of the finest period is "Punto tagliato a +foliami." The laces of this time are now almost +priceless. They are genuine works of art, worked +slowly and patiently under the clear light of the +Italian skies by women who were naturally artistic<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</a></span> +and beauty loving, and who, while working the +shining needle and fairy thread in and out of the +intricacies of the design sang the pretty "Lace +Songs" which may be heard at the Burano Lace +School even now, although 200 or 300 years old. +Many specimens of this exquisite lace are to be +found in the South Kensington Museum, where the +flounce given by Mrs. Bolckow at once explains +the whole scheme of Venetian lace-making.</p> + +<p>Such lace is not to be purchased now except at +great price. The piece illustrated, see page <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, was only +1-1/8 yards in length, and was sold for £145 by one of +our leading lacemen. Barely 5 yards of Venetian +lace, only 2 inches wide and <i>in rags</i>, was sold at +Debenham & Storr's in August, 1907, for £60; and +even the smallest collar or a pair of cuffs runs well +into £10.</p> + +<p>Even in the days of its manufacture this lace commanded +high prices. In the inventory of Queen +Elizabeth's gowns we find such entries as—</p> + +<p> +"To 1 yard Double Italian Cut-worke, ¼ yd. wide. 55/4.<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">" 3 yds. broad needlework lace of Italy, with purls. 50/- per yd."</span><br /> +</p> + +<p>James II. paid £29 for a cravat.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image015.jpg" width="400" height="537" alt="VERY FINE EXAMPLE OF "GROS POINT DE VENISE."" title="" /> +<span class="caption">VERY FINE EXAMPLE OF "GROS POINT DE VENISE."</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">{57}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_IV" id="L_IV"></a>IV<br /> +<br /> +THE LACES<br /> +OF GENOA<br /> +AND MILAN</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">{60}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image016.jpg" width="400" height="414" alt="LOUIS XIII. OF FRANCE, SHOWING VANDYKE LACE +COLLAR AND NARROWER LACE ON SCARF." title="" /> +<span class="caption">LOUIS XIII. OF FRANCE, SHOWING VANDYKE LACE +COLLAR AND NARROWER LACE ON SCARF.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">{61}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>IV +<br /> +THE LACES OF GENOA AND MILAN</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Argentella wrongly called Italian—Genoese—Mixed laces—Milanese—Macramé.</p></div> + + +<p>These are mostly Pillow laces, but fine Point laces +were also manufactured in these towns. In the first-named +town it is said that the lace called "Argentella" +was made, but this is extremely doubtful, most +authorities arguing that it was certainly a French lace +made at the best period.</p> + +<p>A very representative lace of Genoa is known as +collar lace, very widely used for the falling collars of +the Vandyke period. It was an exceedingly beautiful +and decorative lace, and almost indestructible. Specimens +of this lace can even now easily be secured at +a fair price. The laces known as "Pillow Guipure" +are somewhat open to question, the authorities at +South Kensington Museum agreeing to differ, and +labelling most of the specimens "Italian or Flemish." +The finer pieces of this type of lace may safely be +described as "Flemish," as the flax-thread grown and +made in Flanders was much finer than that grown in +the Southern Countries.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">{62}</a></span></p> + +<p>Much of the Genoa lace was worked in what we term +"mixed lace," the design being woven on the pillow, +and the ground and fillings worked in with the needle +either in a network or by brides and picots. A much +inferior kind is made with a woven braid or tape, +the turns of the pattern being made in twisted or +puckered braid, much after the style of the handmade +Point lace made in England some thirty years +ago. This lace was known as "Mezzo Punto," though +the French were discourteous enough to term it +"Point de Canaille," as undoubtedly it was an imitation +of the finer laces made in a loose, poor style.</p> + +<p>The lace of Milan is unquestionably the most +beautiful of the Pillow laces of Italy. While resembling +the plaited lace of Genoa, there is more +individuality about it. Much of this fine lace was +worked for church vestments and altar cloths. +Various heraldic devices are frequently introduced, +surrounded with elegant scroll designs, the whole +being filled up with woven réseau, the lines of which +are by no means regular, but are made to fill in the +interstices.</p> + +<p>Yet another Italian lace is known as</p> + +<h3> +<i>Punto a Groppo, or Macramé</i>. +</h3> + +<p>No doubt this was the earliest form of woven lace, +and, indeed, it may claim an origin as early +as the first garments worn by mankind. In the +earliest remains of antiquity a <i>fringe</i> often decorates +the edges of garments, curtains, and floor-covering, +and seems to be a natural and fitting finish to what +would otherwise be a hard, straight line. In the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">{63}</a></span> +various Assyrian and Egyptian monuments this is +noted again and again.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image017.jpg" width="500" height="512" alt="GENOESE LACE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">GENOESE LACE. +<br /> +Sixteenth or Seventeenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">{65}</a></span>Some of the sixteenth-century pieces which we possess +show simply an elaboration of the knotted fringe, +while much of the later work is exceptionally fine. +The work is so well known, owing to its revival +during the last thirty years in a coarse form, that it +needs little description. Its use, even at its best +period, was confined to household use, for which +purpose it seems particularly adapted.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">{67}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image018.jpg" width="400" height="451" alt="MILANESE LACE. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">MILANESE LACE. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">{69}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_V" id="L_V"></a>V<br /> +<br /> +THE LACES<br /> +OF FRANCE</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">{72}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/image019.jpg" width="300" height="317" alt=""CUT-WORKE."" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"CUT-WORKE."</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/image020.jpg" width="300" height="293" alt="LACIS." title="" /> +<span class="caption">LACIS.</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image021.jpg" width="500" height="326" alt="OLD ITALIAN AND FRENCH CUT AND DRAWN WORK AND "LACIS." + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">OLD ITALIAN AND FRENCH CUT AND DRAWN WORK AND "LACIS." +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">{73}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>V<br /> +<br /> +THE LACES OF FRANCE</h2> + +<h3><i>The Needlepoint Laces of France</i></h3> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Catherine de Medici's collection of "Lacis"—Establishment +of lace-making by Colbert—"Point de France"—"Point +d'Alençon"—"Point d'Argentan"—Modern reproduction +of these at Burano, Italy.</p></div> + + +<p>France in the sixteenth century, as always, led the +van of fashion. Lace appears to have been extensively +used long before its apotheosis at the Court of +Louis le Grand, otherwise Louis XIV. Catherine de +Medici patronised the manufacture of "<i>Lacis</i>," which +was merely darned netting, more or less fine. At +this time "Lacis" and "Cut-worke" were practically +all that was known or used. Bed-hangings, curtains, +and furniture-coverings were covered with alternate +squares of lacis and cutwork. Afterwards the Reticella +laces of Italy were imported and had an immense +vogue, but it was not until the artistically +glorious time of Louis XIV. that an attempt was +made to encourage a manufacture of French laces.</p> + +<p>Colbert, the astute Minister of Louis XIV., became<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">{74}</a></span> +alarmed at the immense sums of money which went +out of the country to purchase the laces of Venice, +and, by means of bribing the best workers of the +Venetian schools, he induced them to settle at +L'Onray, near Alençon. In 1665 he had so far +succeeded that lace rivalling that of Venice was +being produced. The Venetians became alarmed +in their turn (as, indeed, they had need to be) and +issued an edict, ordering the lace-workers to return +forthwith, or, failing this, the nearest relative would +be imprisoned for life, and steps would be taken to +have the truant lace-worker <i>killed</i>. If, however, he +or she returned, complete forgiveness would be extended, +and work found them <i>for life</i> at handsome +remuneration. History does not tell us the result +of this decree, but it evidently failed to destroy the +lace manufacture of France.</p> + +<p>At first the lace manufactured at Alençon received +the name of "Point de France," and was absolutely +indistinguishable from that of Venice. Its magnificence +of design, indeed, may be said to have exceeded +anything before attempted. The introduction +of tiny figures was attributable to the overwhelming +personality of Louis XIV., and was symbolical of his +magnificent sway and far-reaching influence. In the +illustration, page <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, an especially fine specimen of +the lace, Madame de Montespan is seen seated under +the crown, two small Indians are on either side; +a tree bearing flags and trophies completes this +tribute to the genius of the lace-makers and the +splendour of the Court.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">{75}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image022.jpg" width="450" height="656" alt=""POINT DE FRANCE." + +(The property of Lady Kenmare.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"POINT DE FRANCE." +<br /> +(<i>The property of Lady Kenmare.</i>)</span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">{76}</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image023.jpg" width="500" height="388" alt="POINT D'ALENÇON. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">POINT D'ALENÇON. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>The name "Point de France" is given to all lace<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">{77}</a></span> +made from its commencement by Colbert's direction +until about 1678, when the lace-workers, perhaps +forgetting the traditions of the Venetian school, +developed a style of their own and the work became +more distinctly French, being more delicate, +finer in substance, the patterns clearer and more +defined. The importation also of the finer flax +thread from Flanders brought the more exquisite +Pillow lace of Brussels to the notice of the French +lace-workers. The French, as a nation, have always +been foremost in seizing upon new ideas and adapting +them to their own artistic requirements. In this +instance the result was admirable, and it gave to +the world, not the finest lace, as it was impossible +to surpass the earliest Venetian Point laces, but +certainly the next lace in order of merit, "Point +d'Alençon." The chief characteristic of the lace is +the fine, clear ground, the stiff Cordonnet outlining +the pattern, and the exquisite patterns in the "jours" +or fillings.</p> + +<p>The cordonnet of Alençon is the only one which +has horsehair for its foundation. A strand of hair +is carefully stitched down to the edges and is buttonholed +over with the finest thread, and is said, although +giving the lace quite a character of its own, to have +been the cause of much of its destruction, as, in +washing, the hair contracts and curls. It will be +noticed also that the ground is worked in strips, +<i>shortways of the lace of less than an inch in length</i>, +afterwards being stitched together in what is known +as "fine joining." So elaborate was the original Point +d'Alençon that no less than eighteen workers were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">{78}</a></span> +engaged on one single piece. Later the number was +reduced to twelve, when the patterns became less +ornate.</p> + +<p>Although the factory of Alençon existed well into +the early nineteenth century, the style of lace +gradually deteriorated, until it is now non-existent! +The lace made during the long reign of Louis XIV. +is considered by far the finest and best, showing both +grandeur of style and pattern and exquisite workmanship. +Under Louis XV. the lace was equally +well made, but the patterns followed the Rococo +designs which were now introduced into all other +decorative work, while in the reign of the ill-fated +Louis XVI. it went completely out of fashion, +Marie Antoinette affecting a much simpler style of +lace. The Revolution finally caused the complete +overthrow of Alençon lace, as of all fine art work in +France. An attempt was made by Napoleon I. to +revive it, but its glories had passed, and the hands of +the workers had lost their cunning, the result being +known as the worst type of lace, stiff and ugly in +design and coarse of execution.</p> + + +<h3><i>"Point d'Argentan."</i></h3> + +<p>This lace is practically the same as Alençon with +a variation of ground, which, to the uninitiated, +appears coarse. A magnifying glass, however, will +speedily dispel this illusion. The ground in itself is +a marvellous piece of work, each of the sides of the +mesh being covered with ten buttonhole stitches. +Very frequently a mixed lace of Alençon and +Argentan is found, the result being very fine.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">{79}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image024.jpg" width="400" height="363" alt=""POINT DE FRANCE." + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"POINT DE FRANCE." +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image025.jpg" width="400" height="237" alt="POINT D'ARGENTELLA." title="" /> +<span class="caption">POINT D'ARGENTELLA.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">{81}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></a></span></p> + + +<h3><i>Point d'Argentella.</i></h3> + +<p>About this lace most authorities dispute, some +stoutly advocating its claims to be French lace +entirely and others averring that it was made <i>in +imitation</i> of the Point d'Alençon by the Genoese. +Be this as it may, the lace known as Point +d'Argentella is exceptionally fine even amongst +other fine laces, and is noted most specially for +the fine "jours" which form an essential part of the +pattern, every effort apparently being made to give +extra scope for their employment. The specimen +illustrated shows some of these "jours" having the +characteristic mayflower, lozenge, and dotted patterns.</p> + +<p>Much modern lace of this type is now made +at Burano, Italy, where the coarse Italian lace +formerly made there has been entirely superseded. +It strongly imitates Alençon and Argentan lace, +but is without the raised cord which is so typical +of these, having the pattern outlined with flat +buttonhole stitches only. By many connoisseurs +this is considered the finest lace of this age, being +far superior to modern Brussels. It is entirely handmade, +which cannot be, unfortunately, averred for +Brussels, as the fine machine-made net, woven from +the exquisitely fine thread manufactured in Flanders +and Belgium, serves as the ground for all Brussels +lace made at the present time, except when special +orders like Royal trousseaux are in hand. The +lace-makers of Burano, it may be added, imitate the +finest Venetian Rose Point, Point de Gaze, Alençon, +ever produced, the prices comparing very favourably +with the old work, though still very costly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">{83}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image026.jpg" width="500" height="410" alt="POINT D'ARGENTAN WITH POINT D'ALENÇON BORDER." title="" /> +<span class="caption">POINT D'ARGENTAN WITH POINT D'ALENÇON BORDER. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image027.jpg" width="500" height="309" alt="ARGENTELLA LACE, SHOWING THE "PARTRIDGE-EYE" GROUND." title="" /> +<span class="caption">ARGENTELLA LACE, SHOWING THE "PARTRIDGE-EYE" GROUND. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">{85}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_VI" id="L_VI"></a>VI<br /> +<br /> +THE PILLOW<br /> +LACES OF<br /> +FRANCE</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">{88}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image028.jpg" width="450" height="284" alt="EARLY VALENCIENNES." title="" /> +<span class="caption">EARLY VALENCIENNES. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image029.jpg" width="400" height="337" alt="OLD VALENCIENNES. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">OLD VALENCIENNES. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">{89}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>VI<br /> +<br /> +THE PILLOW LACES OF FRANCE</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Valenciennes, "Vraie" and "Fausse"—Lille—Chantilly—Blonde—Caen +and Brittany.</p></div> + + +<h3><i>Valenciennes.</i></h3> + +<p>Valenciennes was formerly part of Flanders, +being in the province of Hainault. It became a +French town in 1668 by treaty. Being a Flemish +town, the lace made there was purely Pillow lace, +and in fineness of thread and beauty of design it +rivalled in its early stages some of the fine old +Flemish laces, which are more like ornamental +cambric than anything else.</p> + +<p>There are two kinds of Valenciennes lace, known +as "Vraie" and "Fausse." These names are very +misleading, as they merely denote the laces made in +the town itself, or in the outskirts.</p> + +<p>Early Valenciennes can only be distinguished +from Flemish laces of the same age by the difference +in the <i>ground</i>. By reference to the little <a href="#Page_39">chart</a> +of lace stitches the distinction will easily be seen, +the Valenciennes being much closer and thicker in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">{90}</a></span> +the plait, and having four threads on each side of +its diamond-shaped mesh. Conventional scrolls and +flowers were used as designs for the toile, the +ground and the pattern being made at the same +time.</p> + +<p>This lace is said to have been worked, like that of +Brussels, in dark, damp cellars, the moist atmosphere +being necessary to prevent the tiny thread breaking. +The lace-workers became nearly blind, and quite +useless, long before they reached thirty years of age.</p> + +<p>So expensive was the fabric that a pair of ruffles +for a gentleman's coat would sell for 4,000 livres. +Madame du Barri made extravagant use of this +lovely lace. In her wardrobe accounts are mentioned, +in 1771, head-dress, throatlets, fichus, and +ruffles, "all plissé de Vraie Valenciennes." The +amount of lace used for a head-dress alone is said +to have cost 2,400 livres.</p> + +<p>The "Vraie Valenciennes" was practically indestructible, +earning the nickname of the "Eternal +Valenciennes" from its durability. The well-to-do +bourgeoise used to invest her savings in real lace, +treasuring and wearing it on all best occasions for a +lifetime.</p> + +<p>The lace-makers of the town itself were so satisfied +with their own lace that they proudly boasted that if +a length commenced in the town of Valenciennes +were taken and completed <i>by the same worker, and +with the same thread</i>, outside their own damp +atmosphere, the exact point of difference would be +shown in the piece.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">{91}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image030.jpg" width="450" height="364" alt=""OLD LILLE." + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"OLD LILLE." +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>The earliest Valenciennes laces show a closer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">{93}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></a></span> +design than that made later, which, by the way, +many connoisseurs much prefer. The latter type +is of clearer ground and more open design. The +flowers do not follow the large scroll-like pattern +of Flanders, but suggest the detached sprays and +festoons of Alençon and Argentan. In both types +there is no cord outlining either pattern or edge. +All is flat as a piece of fine lawn.</p> + + +<h3><i>Lille.</i></h3> + +<p>By no means a <i>favourite</i> lace at any time, Lille +ranks next in merit as a hand-made lace. The mesh +is clearer and larger than most French or Belgian +laces, being made by the simple twisting of two +threads on four sides. The patterns are simple, +and are outlined with a loose flax thread of silky +appearance. The straight edges which characterise +Old Lille lace certainly did not lend +elegance to it. A large manufacture in black lace +was commenced, and the black silk mantles of the +eighteenth century were lavishly trimmed with it. +It is entirely out of favour at this day, however, +only the finest white variety being sought after.</p> + +<p>Lace is still manufactured at Lille, but the patterns +of Mechlin are copied, although the tiny square dots, +one of the distinguishing points of old Lille, are still +used.</p> + + +<h3><i>Chantilly.</i></h3> + +<p>The white laces of Chantilly much resemble Lille, +having the same fine, clear ground and a thick, silky-looking +thread outlining the pattern. A little lace<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">{94}</a></span> +school was established by the Duchesse de Rohan +early in the seventeenth century, and for quite a +hundred years white laces were made, and became +popular. Marie Antoinette used this pretty lace +as well as Valenciennes extensively to trim her +favourite lawn dresses and fichus when she and +the ladies of her Court retired to the Petit Trianon +to play at being shepherdesses.</p> + +<p>About the middle of the eighteenth century +Chantilly began to produce black silk lace of very +fine quality. This is practically the only black lace +for which there is any market. A Chantilly fan or +a Chantilly shawl will always find purchasers. The +exquisite fineness of its ground, the elegance of its +floral festoons and bouquets, make it a desirable +possession. With the Revolution the manufacture +of real old black Chantilly ceased, and was only +revived with the Empire, when, in addition to +copying the old designs, the manufacture of the +famous <i>blonde</i> laces was commenced.</p> + + +<h3><i>French Blonde Lace.</i></h3> + +<p>At first these filmy silk laces were made in the +natural colour floss silk imported from China, hence +its name "Blonde." Some of the finest specimens are +in this colour. Afterwards, when the art of bleaching +the silk was discovered, it was made in a peculiarly +silvery colour, the loosely woven silk being worked +in patterns on what appears a ground of gossamer. +Black Blonde was afterwards manufactured, the lace +being very different to that of nineteenth-century +manufacture, the mesh being large and open. This<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">{95}</a></span> +was a favourite lace with the Spaniards for mantillas, +and much prosperity resulted to the little town of +Chantilly. As with all other laces, the introduction +of machinery killed the industry as an art, and the +only Blonde laces now made are by machine, and are +quite inartistic and inelegant. Hand-made Chantilly +in black silk is still manufactured, but it has only +a limited output.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image031.jpg" width="400" height="527" alt=""THE EMPRESS EUGENIE" WEARING BLONDE LACE. + +(From a Baxter print.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"THE EMPRESS EUGENIE" WEARING BLONDE LACE. +<br /> +(<i>From a Baxter print.</i>)</span> +</div> + + +<h3><i>Other French Laces.</i></h3> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">{97}</a></span>Lace has been made in many smaller towns in +France, but in no instance has it been of sufficient +artistic merit to have made a name. Caen manufactured +Blonde lace in imitation of Chantilly. +In Normandy the peasant women and girls in the +eighteenth century were specially diligent, and +made praiseworthy imitations of Mechlin, Flemish +guipure laces, and Brussels, and also introduced +the working of gold and silver thread and even +beads, which was much used in churches. Some +really exquisite Blonde lace made in this manner +was produced at Caen, fine pearls were used in the +place of beads, and this lace became extremely +popular in England. The Empress Eugénie was +particularly fond of it, and in most of the portraits +of her at the zenith of her beauty she is seen +wearing decorated Blonde lace. It is said that this +lace so soon soiled and spoiled in the making that +only women having specially dry hands could be +employed, and that during the summer months the +lace was worked in the open air, and in the winter in +rooms specially built over cow-houses, so that the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">{98}</a></span> +animals' breath might just sufficiently warm the +workers in this smokeless atmosphere. Other towns +engaged in lace-making were Havre, Dieppe (the +latter town making a lace resembling Valenciennes), +Bayeux, which carried on an extensive trade with +the Southern Islands; Mexico and Spain taking an +inferior and heavy Blonde lace for mantillas.</p> + +<p>In Bretagne so dear is lace to the heart of the +French peasant woman that every garment is trimmed +with lace, often of her own making; and along with +the provision of a little "dot" for her daughter she +makes pieces of lace for her wedding dress. A +curious custom is noted, that the peasant woman +often wears this treasured garment only twice, once +for her wedding and lastly for her funeral!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">{99}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_VII" id="L_VII"></a>VII<br /> +<br /> +THE LACES<br /> +OF FLANDERS</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">{102}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image032.jpg" width="500" height="325" alt="POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Period Louis XIV. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">POINT D'ANGLETERRE. +<br /> +Period Louis XIV. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">{103}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>VII +<br /> +THE LACES OF FLANDERS</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Early Flemish—Brussels lace—Point d'Angleterre—Cost of +real Flanders flax thread—Popularity of Brussels lace—Point +Gaze.</p></div> + + +<p>Whether Italy or Flanders first invented both +Needlepoint and Pillow laces will ever remain a +moot point. Both countries claim priority, and both +appear to have equal right. Italian Needlepoint +without doubt evolved itself from the old Greek or +Reticella laces, that in turn being a development of +"Cutworke" and drawn thread work. Flanders produces +her paintings by early artists in which the +portraits are adorned with lace as early as the fourteenth +century. An altar-piece by Quentin Matys, +dated 1495, shows a girl making Pillow lace, and +later, in 1581, an old engraving shows another girl +busy with her pillow and bobbins. An early Flemish +poet thus rhapsodises over his countrywomen's +handiworks:</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Of many arts, one surpasses all;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The threads woven by the strange power of the hand—<br /></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">{104}</a></span> +<span class="i0">Threads, which the dropping of the spider would in vain attempt to imitate,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And which Pallas herself would confess she had never known."<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>Whether Flanders imitated the Italian laces or +not, it is unquestioned that every other lace-making +country imitated <i>her</i>. Germany, Sweden, France, +Russia, and England have, one after the other, +adopted her method to such an extent that, following +the tactics of Venice in 1698, she also issued an edict +threatening punishment to all who would entice her +workers away.</p> + +<p>So alike are the early laces of Flanders that it is +impossible to distinguish what is known as Flemish +Point, Brussels Point, and Point d'Angleterre. The +last-named lace is peculiar, inasmuch as it has a +French appellation, is named "English," and yet is +purely Brussels in character. Two stories gather +round this lace, which accounts for its name. One is +that the English Government in the time of Charles +II., seeing so much money go out of the country, forbade +the importation of Brussels lace. The English +lace merchants, not to be done out of their immense +profits, smuggled it over in large quantities, and produced +it as having been made in Devonshire, and +sold it under the name of English Point. Another +legend is that when Colbert, in the reign of +Louis XIV., determined to encourage lace-making +in his own country, made prohibitive the importation +of any other lace than France's own manufacture, the +French Court, which had already become enamoured +of Brussels lace, therefore had it smuggled into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">{105}</a></span> +England and thence to France, as <i>English laces</i> +were at that time too insignificant to come under +Colbert's ban.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image033.jpg" width="400" height="455" alt="POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Period of Louis XIV. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">POINT D'ANGLETERRE. +<br /> +Period of Louis XIV. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">{107}</a></span>Whichever tale we choose to believe is of little +consequence. It is sufficient to say that fine Point +d'Angleterre is simply Brussels of the best period +when the glorious Renaissance was at its height. +It is absolutely indistinguishable from Brussels of the +same period. The specimen lappet, illustrated, shows +the "figure" motif which appears in "Point de +France" and the old "Venetian Point," and which +at once dates its manufacture.</p> + +<p>Practically the term Flanders or Flemish lace can +be applied to all the laces made in Flanders and +Belgium of the earliest periods. It is peculiarly fine; +the specimen shown is as fine as gossamer, showing +a total absence of Cordonnet, of course, and not even +having the loose thread which marks the stems +and leaves of Brussels and Angleterre. The flax of +Flanders was at the time of the great lace industry +known and imported to all the towns engaged in +making it. Italy could procure nothing so fine and +eminently suitable to the delicate work she made her +own as this fine thread, grown in Flanders, and spun +in dark, damp rooms, where only a single ray of light +was allowed to enter. The thread was so fine, it is +said, that it was imperceptible to the naked eye and +was manipulated by touch only. The cost of this +thread was £240 a pound, and one pound could be +made into lace worth £720! Real Flanders lace +thread even now, spun with the help of machinery, +costs £70, and is nothing like so durable as the old<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">{108}</a></span> +threads. When we consider that lace to be known +as "Old Lace" must be two hundred or three hundred +years old, we can understand the strength of this +fairy thread, which was like a spider's web in filminess +and yet durable enough to last centuries of wear, and +remain as a lasting memorial of its beauty.</p> + + +<h3>BRUSSELS</h3> + +<p>The early Flemish laces cannot be traced to any +particular town, but Brussels early obtained a reputation +for the production of the soft, elegant laces +which are variously known as "Real old Brussels," +"Point d'Angleterre," "Point d'Aiguille," and "Point +de Gaze." Almost every woman, although knowing +little about lace as an art, knows and easily recognises +"Brussels." It has ever been the most popular lace, +partly because its price has never been actually prohibitive, +although always costly. Choice pieces of +Old Brussels, with real ground, rank among the laces +of France and Venice as pieces of price, but the +later period, especially the kind known as Brussels +applique, is within everybody's reach, even if only +as a border for a best handkerchief.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">{109}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image034.jpg" width="400" height="331" alt=""OLD BRUSSELS" (HAND-MADE GROUND). + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"OLD BRUSSELS" (HAND-MADE GROUND). +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image035.jpg" width="500" height="357" alt="BRUSSELS LAPPET, MADE IN IMITATION OF ALENÇON AND ARGENTAN." title="" /> +<span class="caption">BRUSSELS LAPPET, MADE IN IMITATION OF ALENÇON AND ARGENTAN.</span> +</div> + +<p>Lace made at Brussels at all periods has one +characteristic that places it at once and makes +identification easy at a glance. The threads of the +toilé—that is, the pattern—follows the <i>curves</i>, instead +of, as in other Flanders laces, being straight <i>up</i> and +<i>down</i> and <i>across</i>, each thread being exactly at right +angles to the other; Brussels lace also has a distinctive +edge to its pattern. It has no Cordonnet,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">{111}</a></span> +but a little set of looped stitches worked along the +edge of the design, afterwards whipped over to keep +the edge in place. This is most clearly seen in every +specimen, and, in conjunction with the curved toilé, +at once settles the vexed question of the origin of +Point d'Angleterre.</p> + +<p>The mesh or ground is, again, quite different to +other laces. It has three varieties of ground—</p> + +<p>1. One, mostly used in Point d'Angleterre, being of +fine "brides" with four or five picots, but this ground +is also seen in Venetian and French laces.</p> + +<p>2. A hand-made ground made of looped buttonhole +stitches, which is the finest and most gossamer-like +of all; and</p> + +<p>3. A woven ground made on the pillow with plaited +thread, very like Mechlin, but under the magnifying +glass having two longer sides to its hexagonal mesh, +and therefore being more open and clear.</p> + +<p>The hand, or rather needlepoint, ground was +three times more expensive than the woven, as it +was stronger and more lasting. The special value of +the "vrai reseau" in our own day is that it can be +imperceptibly repaired, the broken stitches replaced, +whereas in the woven ground the point of junction +must show.</p> + +<p>The needle-made net is so fine that one piece in +my possession, though measuring ¾ yard by 8 +inches can easily, in its widest part, be gathered +and passed through a finger ring. At the present day +this net is not made, and even the fine woven ground +is not used except for Royal wedding orders or for +exhibition purposes. A magnificent piece belonging<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">{112}</a></span> +to Messrs. Haywards, of New Bond Street (which +cannot be photographed, unfortunately, as it is between +two sheets of glass, and might fall to pieces if +taken out), was made for George IV., and not delivered, +owing no doubt to the usual depleted state of +that monarch's exchequer. Messrs. Haywards (whose +courtesy is as boundless as their reputation) are +always pleased to show this and their other splendid +specimen collections to those interested in old lace.</p> + +<p>Perhaps no lace is so diversified in style as +Brussels. At first it was purely Flemish, and +almost indistinguishable from it. Then the Venetian +influence crept in, and elaboration of pattern +and the Renaissance scrolls and flower work showed +itself. At the Louis Quatorze period the introduction +of the "fairy people," seen at its finest and +best in Point de France, marks a time of special +beauty. Afterwards the influence of Alençon was +shown (though it never rivalled the exquisite lace of +this factory), and from that time to the present day +these designs have remained for use in its best +work.</p> + +<p>Some of the choicest specimens of old Brussels +are shown in the now discarded "lappets," which +when a lace head-piece and lappets were part of +every gentlewoman's costume, were actually regulated +by Sumptuary Laws as to length. The longer the +lappets the higher the rank.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">{113}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/image036.jpg" width="300" height="589" alt="BRUSSELS LAPPET." title="" /> +<span class="caption">BRUSSELS LAPPET. +<br /> +Eighteenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>The great Napoleon, while reviving the lace-making +of Alençon, specially admired fine old +Brussels, and at the birth of his only son, the little +"King of Rome," ordered a christening garment<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">{115}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></a></span> +covered with the Napoleonic "N's," crowns and +cherubs. This was sold in 1903 at Christie's for +£120. At the same sale a Court train realised +£140.</p> + +<p>In the "Creevy Papers, 1768-1838," mention is +made of Lord Charles Somerset complaining of not +having slept all night, "not having had a minute's +peace through sleeping in 'Cambrik sheets,' the +Brussels lace with which the pillows were trimmed +tickling his face"! This occurred at Wynyards, the +seat of the Earl of Londonderry.</p> + +<p>Queen Anne followed the extravagant fashion +of wearing the costliest laces which William III. +and Queen Mary carried to such an excess. In +1710 she paid £151 for 21 yards of fine Brussels +edging, and two years later the account for Brussels +and Mechlin laces amounted to £1,418.</p> + +<p>In the succeeding reign the ladies of George I.'s +period wore lappets and flounces, caps, tuckers, +aprons, stomachers, and handkerchiefs, all made of +Brussels.</p> + +<p>In the time of George II. lace was even more +worn, but English lace began to rival Brussels, not +in quality, but as a substitute.</p> + +<p>George III. and his wife, Queen Charlotte, were +economists of the first order, and personal decoration +was rigidly tabooed; hence the almost total extinction +of lace as an article of apparel, while in George IV.'s +time dress had evolved itself into shimmery silks +and lawns, lace being merely a trimming, and the +enormous head-dress decorated more frequently with +a band of ribbon.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">{116}</a></span></p> + +<p>An exquisite portrait of Louis Philippe's Queen, +Marie Amelia, by the early Victorian painter Winterhalter +(whose paintings are again by the revival of +fashion coming into favour) shows this fine old +<i>grande dame</i> in black velvet dress covered with three +graduated flounces of Brussels lace, cap and lappets +and "tucker" of the same lace, lace fan, and, sad to +relate, a scarf of English machine-made net, worked +with English run embroidery!</p> + +<p>Although good Queen Adelaide had a pretty fancy +for lace, she wore little of it, and it was left to Queen +Victoria to revive the glory of wearing Brussels to +any extent; and she, alas! was sufficiently patriotic +to encourage home-made products by wearing almost +exclusively Honiton, which I personally am not good +Englishwoman enough to admire except at its latest +stage (just the past few years), when lace-making, +as almost every other art work in this country, is +emerging from what, from an artistic point of view, +has been one long Slough of Despond.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">{117}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image037.jpg" width="400" height="549" alt="COMTESSE D'ARTOIS, WIFE OF ONE OF +LOUIS XIV.'S GRANDSONS, WEARING +FINE BRUSSELS LACE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">COMTESSE D'ARTOIS, WIFE OF ONE OF +LOUIS XIV.'S GRANDSONS, WEARING +FINE BRUSSELS LACE.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">{119}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_VIII" id="L_VIII"></a>VIII<br /> +<br /> +THE MODERN<br /> +BRUSSELS LACES<br /> +AND MECHLIN</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">{122}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image038.jpg" width="400" height="480" alt="AN OLD PRINT OF "MARIE ANTOINETTE," SHOWING THE +SIMPLICITY OF ADORNMENT SHE AFFECTED. + +"MECHLIN" LACE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">AN OLD PRINT OF "MARIE ANTOINETTE," SHOWING THE +SIMPLICITY OF ADORNMENT SHE AFFECTED. +<br /> +"MECHLIN" LACE.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">{123}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>VIII +<br /> +THE MODERN BRUSSELS LACES AND MECHLIN</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Modern Brussels, Point Gaze—Ghent—Duchesse Point—Mechlin +(the Queen of Laces).</p></div> + + +<p>Magnificent laces are still made at Brussels, but +almost wholly on a machine-made ground, the +workers and merchants apparently finding the old +hand-made ground unprofitable. The machine-made +ground is cheap, and often of mixed flax and +cotton instead of being of purely Flanders flax +thread, as in the old days. Both quality and +colour suffer from this admixture, the lace washing +badly and wearing worse.</p> + +<p>The most common lace is the Point Applique, in +which the sprays, groups, and borders on the design +are made separately by hand on the pillow, and are +afterwards applied by tiny stitchings to the machine-made +net. Some qualities are better than others. +In the better class the sprays are appliqued to +the net, which is then cut away and the interstices +of the design filled in with hand-made modes and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">{124}</a></span> +brides, making a very pretty and showy lace. The +best lace made in Brussels now is</p> + + +<h3><i>Point Gaze</i>,</h3> + +<p>in which the finest modern lace is produced. Its chief +characteristics are its superb designs, repeating many +of the fine Renaissance patterns, its clear ground, and +its use of shading in leaves and flowers, which, while +it adds much to the sumptuous effect, is possibly too +naturalistic. This lace is a mixture of hand and +machine lace, the ground being of the best machine +net, the flowers and sprays frequently needle made, the +various fillings being composed of a variety of designs, +and the shading often being produced in the needle-darning +as in modern Ghent and Limerick. Point +de Gaze is costly, but it has the reputation of appearing +"worth its money" to which few other laces of +the present day can aspire.</p> + +<p>Other lace-making towns in Belgium and Flanders +are—</p> + + +<h3><i>Ghent</i>,</h3> + +<p>which produces a fine machine-made net, worked +and embroidered in exact imitation of the earliest +Limerick lace. So <i>real</i> is this imitation that a fine +flounce of 4 yds. 32 in. wide was sold at a London +auction-room a few months ago, as "real old +Limerick," for £60!</p> + +<p>Ghent executes vast quantities of hand-made +imitations of Valenciennes, a good and durable lace, +but much more expensive than the machine-made +varieties which flood the shops as "real Val."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">{125}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image039.jpg" width="400" height="566" alt="MECHLIN LAPPET. + +Eighteenth Century." title="" /> +<span class="caption">MECHLIN LAPPET. +<br /> +Eighteenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">{127}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></a></span></p> + +<p>Perhaps the only other lace worth mentioning +in smaller and later varieties is that known as +"Duchesse point" or "Bruges," which while being a +showy, decorative, and cheap lace, is anything but +satisfactory either in design, manufacture, or wear. +It is largely composed of cotton, is heavy and +cumbrous in design, and after washing becomes +thick and clumsy. It is pillow-made, the flowers +being made on the cushion and afterwards united by +coarse and few brides.</p> + +<p>Almost equal in favour with old Brussels lace was</p> + + +<h3>MECHLIN,</h3> + +<p>which was aptly termed "the Queen of Laces." Old +Mechlin was wondrously fine, and transparent. It is +often spoken of as "Point de Malines" which, of +course, is entirely wrong, as it is not Point at all—being +made entirely, all at one time, or in one piece, +on the pillow. Much of the lace known under the +general name of Flemish Point is really Malines or +Mechlin, the only difference being the fine silvery +thread which runs all through the designs of real +Mechlin. The earliest date of the manufacture of +Mechlin is unknown, but in 1681, it is recorded, that +the people of Malines busied themselves with making +a white lace known as Mechlin. It became a +fashionable lace in England in 1699, Queen Mary +using it considerably and Queen Anne buying it +largely, in one instance purchasing 83 yards of it +for £247.</p> + +<p>It has always remained a favourite lace with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">{128}</a></span> +English royalties, Queen Charlotte almost exclusively +using it. The other day I discovered in a bric-à-brac +shop about twenty yards of it, old and discoloured, +it is true, which came directly from Queen Caroline, +the ill-used wife of George IV. In the earlier +Mechlin, although pillow-made, the introduction of +the "brides with picots," and also the may-flower +patterns of Brussels, helped to make it more decorative. +The ground or réseau was very similar to +Brussels hand-made, but the hexagonal mesh is +shorter, as reference to the diagram of réseaux +will show.</p> + +<p>The exquisite "lightness" of Mechlin, so specially +adapted to "quillings" and "pleatings," accounted for +its popularity. It was specially suitable to the lawns +and muslins of the eighteenth century, but little of +this lace is left owing, no doubt, to its great favour +except the ubiquitous "lappets," for which it was no +doubt "the Queen of Lace."</p> + +<p>The immediate cause of its extinction was the +introduction of Blonde laces, and later its final +overthrow came from its being the easiest lace to +reproduce by machinery.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">{129}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image040.jpg" width="500" height="599" alt="MARIE ANTOINETTE, QUEEN OF LOUIS XVI., SHOWING HOW MECHLIN LACE +WAS USED. + +From an old fashion plate." title="" /> +<span class="caption">MARIE ANTOINETTE, QUEEN OF LOUIS XVI., SHOWING HOW MECHLIN LACE +WAS USED. +<br /> +From an old fashion plate.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">{131}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_IX" id="L_IX"></a>IX<br /> +<br /> +OTHER<br /> +CONTINENTAL<br /> +LACES</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">{133}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>IX +<br /> +OTHER CONTINENTAL LACES</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Spanish lace; Gold and silver laces of Spain—German laces—Russian +laces—Maltese silk and thread laces.</p></div> + + +<p>Outside the great lace-making countries of Italy, +France, and Flanders, little lace was ever made, and +that little of less consequence.</p> + + +<h3><i>Spanish Lace.</i></h3> + +<p>Much of the old lace known as "Spanish Point" is +not Spanish at all, but the best of Italian Rose +Point on a large scale, being the variety known as +Gros Point. It was not extensively used for +dress purposes, as contemporary portraits show, +but Spain being such an ultra-Romanist country, +vast quantities of it were imported into Spain for +church use. When Spain fell on unhappy days, in +1830, and the religious houses were dissolved, this +lace was eagerly bought by connoisseurs and collectors +and became known as Spanish Point. It is not unlikely +that the Italian lace was copied by the nuns +of the Spanish convents; indeed, at South Kensington<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">{134}</a></span> +Museum there is a set of church altar lace which is +admittedly Spanish work and is a distinct but far +off imitation of Italian Point.</p> + +<p>Spain made gold and silver laces of fine quality +and gorgeous design. Blonde laces in both cream +and black are almost indigenous to the soil, and a +particular kind of black Blonde, embroidered with +colours, specially appealed to the colour-loving +people.</p> + + +<h3><i>German Laces.</i></h3> + +<p>Perhaps at the present day more lace is made in +Germany than at any other period. An enormous +manufacture of good machine-made lace is exported +yearly, the variety known as Saxony being both +popular and cheap.</p> + +<p>Germany has no national lace, the clever <i>hausfraus</i> +caring more to decorate their table and bed-linen +than their persons, and using the substantial +and practical embroideries of the cross-stitch patterns +more than the elegant frailties of lace trimming. +Lacis network darned into patterns has always +been popular here, as also in Denmark, Sweden, and +Norway.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">{135}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image041.jpg" width="400" height="454" alt="DUCHESSE LACE. + +Modern." title="" /> +<span class="caption">DUCHESSE LACE. +<br /> +Modern.</span> +</div> + + +<h3><i>Russia.</i></h3> + +<p>The Russian laces need little more than a passing +note. As in Germany, Lacis and Cutworke form +the only hand-made lace known, the people contenting +themselves with these varieties and using +coloured threads to further decorate them. Their +laces may be called merely Russian embroideries. +Peter the Great did much to found a lace school,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">{137}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></a></span> +but only gold laces were made, of a barbaric +character. Recently an attempt has been made to +imitate the Venetian laces, with very fair results, but +the character is very stiff and mechanical, going back +to the primitive forms of Reticella rather than the +elegancies of Italian Point.</p> + +<p>The only other Continental lace requiring note is</p> + + +<h3><i>Maltese</i>,</h3> + +<p>a lace made entirely with bobbins and on a +pillow. This lace is of ancient make, being known +as early as the old Greek laces, which it strongly +resembles. Its very popularity has killed its use as +a fine lace, and at the present day it is copied as a +cheap useful lace in France, England, Ireland, and +even India. The old Maltese lace was made of the +finest flax thread, afterwards a silk variety, which is +well known, being made in cream. Black lace was +also manufactured, and at the time of the popularity +of black lace as a dress trimming it was much used. +At the present day the lace is not of the old quality, +cotton being frequently mixed with the flax threads. +There is no demand for it, and it is about the most +unsaleable lace of the day.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">{139}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_X" id="L_X"></a>X<br /> +<br /> +A SHORT<br /> +HISTORY OF<br /> +LACE IN<br /> +ENGLAND</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">{141}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></a></span></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image042.jpg" width="450" height="592" alt="QUEEN ELIZABETH: RUFF OF VENETIAN POINT. + +(National Portrait Gallery.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">QUEEN ELIZABETH: RUFF OF VENETIAN POINT. +<br /> +(<i>National Portrait Gallery.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">{143}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>X +<br /> +A SHORT HISTORY OF LACE IN ENGLAND</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Early samplers—Lace worn by Queen Elizabeth; by the +early Stuarts—Extravagant use of lace in time of +Charles II.—William and Mary's lace bill.</p></div> + + +<p>Even at the risk of being considered utterly unpatriotic, +I cannot give much more than faint praise +to the lace-making of England up to the present +date, when notable efforts are at last being made to +raise the poor imitation of the Continental schools +to something more in accordance with artistic +conception of what a great National Art might +become.</p> + +<p>As in all countries, lace-making apparently commenced +in its early English stages by drawn-thread +and cutwork. In many of the charming old sixteenth-century +English samplers just as exquisite +cut-work, and its natural successor Reticella, or +"punto in aria" is shown, as in the finest examples +of the Venetian schools. Unfortunately, however, +English fine lace-making came to a sudden and +inexplicable end, although we know that any quantity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">{144}</a></span> +of fine Venetian, exquisite Brussels, or Flemish laces, +and the wonderful Point de France were being imported +into the country and lavishly used.</p> + +<p>As early as the reign of Edward IV. lace was mentioned +as being prohibited for importation amongst +other items of feminine luxury, such as "ribans, +fringes of silk and cotton," but it is considered that +the word "laces" here means only the twisted threads +that go to make up a lace or tie, commonly ending +in tags or points. It must be allowed, however, +that laces, or more probably "gimps" of gold and +silver threads were used for trimming both lay and +ecclesiastical garments, and in Henry VII.'s reign +we find that importation of Venetian lace was permitted, +but this is generally admitted still to refer to +gold and silver lace, more probably coming from +Genoa.</p> + +<p>It was not really until the time of bluff King Hal +that lace became an article of fashion, when during +the life of the last of his unfortunate queens he +permits "the importation of all manner of gold and +silver fringes, or <i>otherwise</i>, with all new 'gentillesses' +of what facyion or value, for the pleasure of +our dearest wyeff the Queen."</p> + +<p>Henry himself also began to indulge in all these +little elegances of fashion, and wore his sleeves +embroidered with cutwork, and handkerchiefs edged +with gold and silver, treating himself liberally to +"coverpanes" and "shaving-cloths" trimmed with +gold lace.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">{145}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image043.jpg" width="450" height="556" alt="EDMUND SPENSER: COLLAR TRIMMED WITH RETICELLA. + +Early period." title="" /> +<span class="caption">EDMUND SPENSER: COLLAR TRIMMED WITH RETICELLA. +<br /> +Early period.</span> +</div> + +<p>Little mention of white work was made in the +inventories of Henry VIII. or his Queens, but Cardinal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">{147}</a></span> +Wolsey seems to have had more than his share +of cutwork embroideries, judging from contemporary +portraits.</p> + +<p>In Queen Mary's reign white work began to +be more frequently spoken of, and in 1556 it is +stated that Lady Jane Seymour presented the +Queen with "a smock of fair white work, Flanders +making."</p> + +<p>It was not until Queen Elizabeth's time that +lace became freely mentioned; then suddenly we +are introduced to an endless variety of lace and +trimmings, both of gold and silver, pearl and embroideries, +and various white work! In some of the +old Chronicles mention was made of drawn work, +cut-work, Crown lace, bone lace for ruffs, Spanish +chain, parchment, hollow, and diamond lace. Many +of these terms cannot be understood.</p> + +<p>The enormous ruffs worn by Queen Elizabeth +were introduced into England in the time of her +sister Mary. Portraits both of Philip of Spain and +Queen Mary show ruffs, but not edged with lace. +Queen Elizabeth's, on the contrary, are both edged +with lace and, in some instances, covered with it. +On her poor old effigy at Westminster Abbey, where +her waxen image is dressed in her actual garments, +the only lace that appears is on the enormous ruff, +three-quarters of a yard wide, covered with a fine +lace of the loose network kind. The rest of her +garments are trimmed with gold and silver lace and +<i>passementerie</i>.</p> + +<p>In the succeeding reign lace of a geometric design +shows itself on the ruffs of the richest people.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">{148}</a></span> +Pictures in the National Portrait Gallery show many +exquisite examples of the beautiful Reticella of +Venice, which must have been very costly to the +purchaser, as twenty-five yards or more of this fine +lace were required to edge a ruff.</p> + +<p>It was in the reign of James I. and his consort, +Anne of Denmark, that Flanders lace and the +expensive Point laces of Italy first became widely +popular. Then, as now, they were costly—to such +an extent that many gentlemen sold an estate to +buy laces for their adornment.</p> + +<p>It was during this reign that we first learn of a +lace being made in England, as Queen Anne of +Denmark on her journey south purchased lace at +<i>Winchester</i> and <i>Basing</i>, but history mentions not +what kind of lace it was. Apparently only a simple +kind of edging was used, made on a pillow.</p> + +<p>The enormous ruffs went out of fashion with the +death of James I. Charles I., in all his portraits, +wears the falling collar edged with Vandyke lace. +It was during this reign that Venetian lace reached +its apotheosis in England. The dress of the day +has never been surpassed, though it became much +more elaborate and ostentatious in the time of +Charles II. and William and Mary. Falling collars +were specially adapted to the display of the handsome +laces of Venice. The cuffs of the sleeves +were likewise trimmed with the same; scarves were +worn across the breast, trimmed with the narrower +Reticella.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">{149}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image044.jpg" width="450" height="526" alt="SEVENTEENTH CENTURY FALLING COLLAR TRIMMED WITH FINE +RETICELLA." title="" /> +<span class="caption">SEVENTEENTH CENTURY FALLING COLLAR TRIMMED WITH FINE +RETICELLA. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>During the Commonwealth the laces of Venice +suffered a temporary eclipse, and the plainer laces<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">{151}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></a></span> +of Flanders were freely used. Cromwell himself, it +is said, did not disdain the use of it. His effigy at +Westminster was dressed in a fine Holland lace-trimmed +shirt, with bands and cuffs of the same. +This effigy, by the way, was destroyed at the +Restoration.</p> + +<p>Charles II., who during his exile in France had +become imbued with the extravagant taste of the +French Court, gave vast orders for "Points of +Venice and Flanders," on the plea of providing +English lace-workers with better patterns and +ideas.</p> + +<p>The falling collar certainly went out of fashion, +but lace was liberally used on other parts of the +dress. Lace frills of costly Point edged the knee-breeches, +lace cravats were worn and deep falling +cuffs. Charles II., in the last year of his reign, +spent £20 for a new cravat for his brother's birthday.</p> + +<p>During James II.'s reign extravagance in lace +purchases are still mentioned, but it surely reached +its culmination in the joint reign of William and +Mary, when enormous sums were spent by both +King and Queen. In one year Queen Mary's lace +bill amounted to £1,918. New methods of using +lace were fashioned. A huge head-dress called the +"Fontange," with upright standing ends of Venetian +Point, double hanging ruffles falling from elbow +sleeves, lace-trimmed aprons, lace tuckers, characterised +the feminine dress of the day, while the +"Steinkirk" cravat and falling cuffs of William III.'s +day ran up accounts not much less than that of his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">{152}</a></span> +Queen. In 1690 his bill was £1,603, and in 1695 +it amounted to £2,459!</p> + +<p>The effigies of William and Mary in the Abbey, +wear the very finest Venetian Point laces. None of +the other figures wear such costly lace, nor in such +profusion.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">{153}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image045.jpg" width="400" height="336" alt="COLLAR IN GROS POINT DE VENISE. + +Louis XIV. period." title="" /> +<span class="caption">COLLAR IN GROS POINT DE VENISE. +<br /> +Louis XIV. period. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">{155}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_XI" id="L_XI"></a>XI<br /> +<br /> +ENGLISH<br /> +LACES</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">{157}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XI +<br /> +ENGLISH LACES</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Queen Anne and Mechlin—Establishment of lace-making in +Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire—Buckingham lace—Wiltshire +lace—Devonshire lace—Modern Honiton +revival.</p></div> + + +<p>It was in Queen Anne's time that the earliest really +good lace manufactured in England appeared. Driven +from France by the edict of Louis XIV., the refugees +found a home in England, and encouraged by Queen +Anne's fondness for laces other than Venetian, they +made and taught the English lace-workers, among +whom they settled, the art of real lace-making, +which up to this time had apparently been +only half understood. Numerous lace schools now +sprang up, the counties of Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, +and Northampton specially becoming +known. Valenciennes and Mechlin were the varieties +of laces principally copied; a very pretty lace, very +reminiscent of Mechlin, being the "Baby lace," which +received its name from being so much used to trim +babies' caps. Although very much like Valenciennes +and Mechlin, the laces were much coarser both in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">{158}</a></span> +thread and design than their prototypes. Bedfordshire +and Northamptonshire did not long retain the art of +lace-making, but Buckingham lace remained a staple +manufacture, and is much esteemed even to-day, +many connoisseurs considering it far better as a lace +than the somewhat clumsy laces of Devonshire. The +specimen shown is a piece of old Buckingham lace +closely copying the réseau and sprigs of Lille which +most lace-lovers consider it excels. The net of +Buckinghamshire is an exact copy of the Lille mesh, +being made of two threads twisted in a diamond +pattern, the sprays being worked on the pillow at +the same time. The patterns of the old Buckingham +lace are not very varied, the best known being +what is called "Spider lace," a coarse kind of +open mesh being worked in the pattern. The +principal town engaged in the eighteenth century +was Newport Pagnel, which was cited as being most +noted for making Bobbin lace. Old Brussels designs +were used, and some quaint lace of early Flemish +design, was made. The early English run +lace, which was even so late as fifty years ago +very popular, was mostly made here. Aylesbury, +Buckingham, and High Wycombe also made +lace, and in the last-named old town cottage lace-making +may be seen to this day. Very quaint +are the old lace bobbins that may be purchased +in the "antique" shops of these lace-making towns. +The lace-workers apparently indulged many a +pretty fancy in shaping them in a diversity of +ways, very few bobbins being alike. Some were +made of bone, really prettily turned, with dotted +and pierced patterns on them. Others were silver-studded, +and again others were banded in silver. +The wooden ones were always decorated, if possible, +each one differently from the others, so that +the worker might distinguish each thread without +looking at it. Nearly every bobbin was ended with +a bunch of coloured beads strung on wire, and a +collection of these bobbins, with their "gingles," +often yields up a pretty and quaint necklace. +One in my possession has a quaint bead made +of "ancient Roman glass," worth at least ten +shillings. One wonders how this bit of Roman +magnificence had strayed into an English cottage +home!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">{159}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image046.jpg" width="450" height="511" alt=""OLD BUCKINGHAM." + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">"OLD BUCKINGHAM." +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image047.jpg" width="500" height="274" alt="EARLY DEVONSHIRE LACE. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">EARLY DEVONSHIRE LACE. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">{161}</a></span>Buckinghamshire is the only one of the Midland +counties which has produced <i>wide</i> lace; the +adjoining counties confined themselves to edgings +at most some 6 inches wide. A flounce in my +collection measures 21 inches, and is of very +elegant design, and of fine quality. In Wiltshire +lace appears to have been made at an early date +in the eighteenth century, but little lace is left +to show its quality. A curious piece is said to +belong to an old family in Dorset, who vouch for +the lace having belonged to Queen Charlotte, the +wife of George III. Like many other traditional +"antiques," this is undoubtedly a fairy story, as it +claims to have been made in commemoration of +the defeat of the Spanish Armada, <i>at contemporary +times</i>. It is exceedingly handsome, showing +one of Philip's ships, very suggestively surrounded +by big sea fish and apparently resting on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">{162}</a></span> +rocky bottom of the ocean. In the next panel +Tilbury Fort is portrayed, and another ship, one +of England's glory, proudly rules the waves. The +design is undoubtedly English, and most probably +it was made in commemoration of the historic event—but +the lace is Point d'Argentan, and was most +likely manufactured specially for Queen Charlotte.</p> + +<p>Lyme Regis at one time rivalled Honiton, the +laces of both towns being equally prized. Queen +Charlotte wore a "head and lappets" made here +when she first came to England, and afterwards +she ordered a splendid lace dress to be made. +When, however, Queen Victoria, in her wish to +encourage the English makers, sent an order for +her marriage lace, not sufficient workers were found +to produce it.</p> + + +<h3>DEVONSHIRE LACE.</h3> + +<p>As early as 1614 the lace-makers of Devonshire +were known. The influx of refugees from Flanders +in the Midlands and southern counties undoubtedly +established lace-making in both parts of the kingdom. +Many of the Honiton lace-workers married +these refugees, and to this day the people are of +mixed descent. Quaint names of Flemish extraction +appear over the shop doors.</p> + +<p>In the early days both men, women, and children +seem to have pursued the art of lace-making, boys +learning and working at it until the age of sixteen, +when they were either apprenticed to some trade +or went to sea.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">{163}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/image048.jpg" width="400" height="246" alt="OLD HONITON (NEEDLEPOINT GROUND)." title="" /> +<span class="caption">OLD HONITON (NEEDLEPOINT GROUND).</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image049.jpg" width="450" height="491" alt="OLD HONITON. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">OLD HONITON. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">{165}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></a></span></p> + +<p>Most of the old Devonshire laces bear distinct +likeness to the fine Flemish lace, only the clumsiness +of the design or the coarse workmanship differentiating +them. It has, however, one special feature +which gave it the name "Trolly lace," as, unlike the +perfectly flat lace of Flanders, it has a coarse thread +or "trolly" outlining its patterns, and being made +of English thread, it was coarse and not very durable.</p> + + +<h3><i>Honiton</i></h3> + +<p>has always easily ranked first amongst our British +laces, although by many not considered equal to fine +Bucks. Like the Midland lace, it has been always +made with Flanders thread, and therefore has maintained +its popularity because of its <i>wear</i> and its <i>colour</i>. +The early Honiton workers copied "Brussels" lace, +but because of their inability to produce an artistic +design it has never been anything but a <i>poor</i> copy. +Even when the Brussels influence was most direct +the flowers and sprays were placed inartistically, +while the scroll copies of the early Flemish schools +can only be termed the imitative handiwork of a +child.</p> + +<p>The most prized specimens of old Honiton are +those with hand-made ground, made of Flanders +flax. Very little of this real ground Honiton +lace is left. Queen Victoria did much to make +Honiton lace <i>the</i> lace of the land; but although +a regular trade has been established, and much +good work accomplished, Honiton of the past will +never be regarded on the same plane as the laces +of Venice, France, and Brussels. Even in its best<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">{166}</a></span> +variety it lacks the exquisite filmy touch of Brussels, +the dainty grace of Alençon, and the magnificence of +Point de France and Venetian Point. The Honiton +laces made since the introduction of machine-made +net is especially poor. Flower sprigs and sprays +are made separately on the pillow, and afterwards +applied to the machine-made ground. These are, as a +rule, flowers and foliage treated naturalistically, and +are heavy and close in design. These are often +very sparingly applied over a wide expanse of net in +order to make as much lace with as little trouble as +possible. This is very different to the work of the +old Honiton lace-worker, who made every inch of it +herself—first the sprays and scrolls, then worked the +ground round it, and received, it is said, from the +middleman (who purchased it for the town market) +as many shillings as would cover the lace offered +for sale.</p> + +<p>We are glad to say, however, that very praiseworthy +efforts are being made to introduce better +methods and more artistic designs in the many lace +schools which are being formed in various parts of +Devon. Mrs. Fowler, of Honiton, one of the oldest +lace-makers in this centre, making exquisite lace, +the technique leaving nothing to be desired, and +also showing praiseworthy effort in shaking off the +trammels of the traditional designs.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">{167}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image050.jpg" width="500" height="256" alt="MODERN HONITON, MADE BY MRS. FOWLER." title="" /> +<span class="caption">MODERN HONITON, MADE BY MRS. FOWLER.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">{169}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_XII" id="L_XII"></a>XII<br /> +<br /> +SCOTCH<br /> +AND IRISH<br /> +LACES</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">{171}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XII<br /> +<br /> +SCOTCH AND IRISH LACES</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Hamilton lace—Mary Queen of Scots—Modern lace-making +in Ireland—Limerick lace—Carrick-ma-cross—Irish +crotchet—Convent laces.</p></div> + + +<p>Scotch lace can hardly be said to exist. At one +time a coarse kind of network lace called "Hamilton +lace" was made, and considerable money was obtained +by it, but it never had a fashion, and deservedly so. +Since the introduction of machinery, however, there +has been considerable trade, and a tambour lace is +made for flounces, scarfs, &c. The more artistic class +of work made by Scotswomen is that of embroidering +fine muslin, and some really exquisite work is made +by the common people in their homes.</p> + +<p>Much mention is often made of Mary Queen of +Scots and her embroideries and laces. It must be +remembered that she married firstly the Dauphin of +France, and while at the French Court imbibed the +taste for elegant apparel and costly lace trimmings. +There is no record that she ever wore lace of her own +country's manufacture, and, although English writers<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">{172}</a></span> +often quote the lace made by her fair hands, really +the needlework made by Queen Mary at Fotheringay +was embroidery.</p> + + +<h3><i>Irish Laces.</i></h3> + +<p>The early lace of Ireland was the usual cut and +drawn work, and it was not until the earlier part of +the nineteenth century that lace-making actually +became a craft. In the eighteenth century many +brave attempts were made to commence lace schools, +and the best work was done in the convents, where +really fine work was executed by the nuns, the +patterns having been sent from Italy. It was not +until 1829 that the manufacture of Limerick lace was +first instituted. This really is not lace at all, as it is +merely chain-stitch worked in patterns on machine-made +net.</p> + +<p>This pretty so-called lace was first made at +Limerick by an Oxford man, who established a +school there, taking with him twenty-four girls as +teachers. It quickly became very popular, in the +early "fifties" every woman of either high or low +degree possessing herself of at least a lace collar +or fichu of Limerick lace.</p> + +<p>In 1855 more than 1,500 workers were employed, +but decidedly the best lace of the manufacture belongs +to the time prior to this date. The quality of the +net ground has also deteriorated, or perhaps the best +net has not been purchased.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">{173}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image051.jpg" width="450" height="562" alt="LIMERICK "FILLINGS."" title="" /> +<span class="caption">LIMERICK "FILLINGS."</span> +</div> + +<p>Very dainty little sprays and flowers are produced +in the fine chain or tambour stitch, the hearts of the +flowers or the centres of the scallops being worked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">{175}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></a></span> +over in an endless variety of extra stitches, as will be +seen in the illustration.</p> + +<p>Another variety of lace is Carrick-ma-cross, which +was contemporary with Limerick. This is merely +embroidery again, but has more claim to the title of +lace, as the tiny little flowers and scrolls are connected +with brides made of buttonhole stitch ornamented +with picots. This is really a very handsome +lace, its only drawback being that it will not <i>wash</i>. +The fine lawn of which it is made is buttonholed +round and then cut away. This, in cleaning or +washing, <i>contracts</i> and leaves the buttonhole edging, +and in a few cleanings it is a mass of unmendable +rags.</p> + +<p>Slightly more serviceable is another variety of +Carrick-ma-cross, on which the lawn is appliquéd to a +machine-made net, the pattern outlined with buttonhole +stitches, and the surplus lawn cut away, leaving +the network as a grounding, various pretty stitchings +filling up the necessary spaces.</p> + +<p>Yet another kind of lace is made, and is really +the only real lace that Ireland can claim. This is the +Irish crotchet, which in its finer varieties is a close +imitation of Venetian Point, but made with fine +thread and with a crotchet needle. Some of the +best is really worth purchasing, but it is costly, +realising as much as five guineas per yard. A very +delicate "Tatting" also comes from the Emerald Isle, +and in comparing English and Irish laces one is inevitably +struck with the reflection that there is more +"artistry" in the production of Irish laces and embroidery +than in England with all her advantages.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">{176}</a></span> +The temperamental differences of the two races are +distinctly shown in this, perhaps more than any +other art.</p> + +<p>Much really notable work is now being executed +in the Irish lace schools. At Youghal, co. Monaghan, +an exact replica of old Venetian Point is being +worked. Various fine specimens from the school +occupy a place at South Kensington Museum, and +the lace industry of Ireland may be said to be in a +healthy condition.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">{177}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image052.jpg" width="500" height="667" alt="CARRICK-MA-CROSS LACE. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">CARRICK-MA-CROSS LACE. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">{179}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_XIII" id="L_XIII"></a>XIII<br /> +<br /> +HOW TO<br /> +IDENTIFY<br /> +LACE</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">{182}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 398px;"> +<img src="images/image053.jpg" width="398" height="500" alt="THE CENTRE STRIP IS OLD "RETICELLA," WITH GENOA +BORDERS. + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">THE CENTRE STRIP IS OLD "RETICELLA," WITH GENOA +BORDERS. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">{183}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XIII +<br /> +HOW TO IDENTIFY LACE</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Style—Historical data—Réseaux.</p></div> + + +<p>The great difficulty in attempting to identify any +specimen of lace is that from time to time each +country experimented in the manners and styles +of other lace-making nations. The early Reticella +workers copied what is known as the "Greek +laces," which were found in the islands of the +Grecian Archipelago. Specimens of these laces +found in the excavations of the last thirty years +show practically no difference in method and style. +France copied the Venetian laces, and at one period +it is impossible to say whether a given specimen +was made at Alençon or Venice. Italy, in turn, +imitated the Flemish laces—to such an extent that +even the authorities at South Kensington Museum, +with all their leisure and opportunities for study +and the magnificent specimens at hand for identification, +admit that certain laces are either "Italian or +Flemish." Valenciennes was once a Flemish town, +and though now French, preserves the Flemish<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">{184}</a></span> +character of lace, some specimens of Mechlin being +so like Valenciennes as to baffle certainty.</p> + +<p>Later, Brussels borrowed the hand-made grounds +of France and Venice, and still later England copied +Brussels, the guipures of Flanders, and the ground +and style of Lille! All this makes the initial stages +of the study of lace almost a hopeless quest. The +various expensive volumes on lace, although splendidly +written and gorgeously illustrated, leave the student +with little more than an interesting and historical +knowledge on which to base the actual study of lace. +Here I may refer my readers to the one and only +public collection of lace, I believe, in England—that +of the South Kensington Museum, where specimens +of lace from all countries and of all periods are shown, +and where many magnificent bequests, that of Mrs. +Bolckow especially, make the actual study of lace +a possibility.</p> + +<p>It is to be hoped that the governing body of +the museum will, in its own good time, make +this a pleasure instead of a pain. The specimens, +the <i>most important to the student</i>, are placed in a +low, dark corridor. Not a glimmer of light can +be obtained on some of the cases, which also are +upright, and placed so closely together that on +attempting to see the topmost specimen on one side +the unfortunate student literally bangs her head into +the glass of the next one. A gentle complaint at the +Directors' office concerning the difficulty brought +forth the astonishing information that there was +no room at their disposal, but that in good time +better light might be found. As these cases have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">{185}</a></span> +been in identically the same place for the past fifteen +years, one hopes that the "good time" may come +before one becomes a "spectacled pantaloon" with +no desire to see the wonders of that Palace of Art.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 407px;"> +<img src="images/image054.jpg" width="407" height="500" alt="POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Style Louis XV. Eighteenth Century" title="" /> +<span class="caption">POINT D'ANGLETERRE. +<br /> +Style Louis XV. Eighteenth Century +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">{187}</a></span>This little protest is made in the hope that the +"Lords of the Committee" may possibly have their +attention drawn to what amongst the lace-lovers +and students in this country is a "standing grievance."</p> + +<p>It is almost impossible, even from the best of +photographic illustrations, to learn all the intricacies +of identification. The photographs clearly show +style, but it needs specimens of the actual lace +to show method of working. From the illustrations +in this book, specially selected from the South +Kensington Collection, and from specimens in my +own collection, every variety of style may be +easily understood, as they have been particularly +selected to show each point of difference. Commencing +with the earliest form of lacework—<i>i.e.</i>, +"cutworke"—nothing will better show this than +the "Sampler" specimen, which, half way down, +shows two rows entirely typical of this kind of +early lace-making—for such it is. A little lower, +examples of drawn threadwork are seen, while +the upper portion illustrates satin stitch patterns, +which more properly belong to embroidery.</p> + +<p>The ancient collar from the South Kensington +Collection, page <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, shows some of the finest +developments of cutwork, when the foundation of +linen was entirely dispensed with. The work is +exceedingly fine, the threads being no coarser, indeed +in many cases less so, than the fine linen it adorns.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">{188}</a></span> +This is known as Reticella, or "punto in aria." +The last name is applicable to all the laces of Venice +which succeeded Reticella, and means lace literally +made out of nothing or without any building +foundation.</p> + +<p>The specimen is still of the same class, but +where before the design was simple geometric +square and pointed as in all the early lace, it now +takes on the lovely flowing scroll of the Renaissance +that marks the latter half of the seventeenth +century.</p> + +<p>The same grand styles may be noted all through +the great period of Italian Needlepoint lace. It will +be seen in a lesser degree in the Guipure laces of +Milan and Genoa, but here the cramping influence +of the Flemish school shows itself distinctly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">{189}</a></span></p> + + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/image055.jpg" width="450" height="453" alt="ITALIAN ECCLESIASTICAL LACE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">ITALIAN ECCLESIASTICAL LACE.</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image056.jpg" width="500" height="316" alt="FLEMISH OR GENOESE ECCLESIASTICAL LACE." title="" /> +<span class="caption">FLEMISH OR GENOESE ECCLESIASTICAL LACE. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>The same bold lines may be noted in the early +Needlepoint lace of France, which had not then +become sufficiently sure of her capacity to develop +a style of her own, and all show the Renaissance +spirit. Afterwards when the superb Point de +France was at its height of manufacture along with +grand outline and exquisite handicraft, the influence +of the mighty monarch Louis XIV. asserted itself +and although the lace itself commands unbounded +admiration, fantastic little notions, symbolical and +naturalistic, showed itself—as an illustration page +<a href="#Page_75">75</a>: little figures representing "the Indian," "canopied +crown over a sealed lady," trees growing all +manner of bizarre fruit and flowers, all symbolical of +Louis the Magnificent's unbounded power and sway. +In the South Kensington Museum there is a still<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">{191}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></a></span> +finer specimen, which has not yet been photographed, +I believe—a magnificent flounce, about eighteen +inches wide (really two boot top pieces joined), of +what is known as pseudo-Oriental character, which +shows amongst the usual exquisite scrolling no less +than seven different figures on each piece—viz., an +Indian, a violinist in dress of Louis XIV. period, +a lady riding on a bird, two other ladies, one with +a pet dog and the other a parrot, a lady violinist, and +another lady seated before a toilet-table. These little +figures are not more than three-quarters of an inch +high, but are worked with such minuteness that even +the tiny features are shown. This fantastic adoption +of the human figure was copied in Italy and Flanders. +The finest specimens of Point d'Angleterre (Brussels) +show the same designs; and it may broadly be +stated that all lace with figures is of the Louis XIV. +period, and over two hundred years old.</p> + +<p>Succeeding this period came the dainty elegance of +the French laces, when the workers of Alençon and +Argentan had developed a purely French style. Note +the Point d'Alençon, illustration page <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, where the +characteristics of the period are fully shown. The +illustration shows a mixed lace, which only recently has +been acknowledged by the South Kensington people +as Point d'Argentan. Along with the typical Argentan +ground of the upper portion is the fine Alençon +mesh and varied jours of the border. This also +is Louis XIV. style. The lappet shown next is +exceedingly instructive, as till quite lately the people +who professed to understand lace agreed to call +this Genoese, although it was quite unlike anything<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">{192}</a></span> +else made there. This lappet was so labelled at +South Kensington, but now is admittedly Argentella +(or little Argentan). It is remarkably like Alençon, +being of the same period, the only points of difference +being that the design is not outlined with a raised +Cordonnet (though in different places of the design +a raised and purled Cordonnet is often stitched on +it) and the special ground (partridge eye) which +is agreed to denote "Argentella" lace—page <a href="#Page_83">83</a>. +It is sometimes called the may-flower ground, but +this is somewhat misleading as that design occurs +in other laces. The only other great style is that +of Flanders, which at its earliest period had received +no influence from the Renaissance that had seized +the southern countries of Europe and was still in +the grip of mediæval art. It was not until Italian +influence permeated France that Flemish lace perceptibly +altered in character.</p> + +<p>These are to all intents and purposes the three +great styles of lace. England had no style: she +copied Flemish, Brussels, and Mechlin laces. Ireland, +on the contrary, copied Italian in her Irish +crotchet and Carrick-ma-cross (in style only, but +not workmanship), and adapted Lille and Mechlin +and Brussels and Buckingham in her Limerick +lace.</p> + +<p>The student must next make herself familiar with +the methods pursued by the old lace-workers, and +here the difficulty commences. All lace is either +Needlepoint, pillow-made, or machine-made. <i>Needlepoint</i> +explains itself. Every thread of it is made +with a needle on a parchment pattern, and only two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">{193}</a></span> +stitches are used, buttonhole and a double-loop +which is really a buttonhole stitch.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 341px;"> +<img src="images/image057.jpg" width="341" height="500" alt="BRUSSELS LAPPET. + +Nineteenth Century." title="" /> +<span class="caption">BRUSSELS LAPPET. +<br /> +Nineteenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">{195}</a></span>This can be clearly understood by referring to +Charts Nos. <a href="#Page_36">I.</a> and <a href="#Page_39">II.</a>, where the <i>two Brussels +grounds</i> are shown. The Needlepoint ground, No. <a href="#Page_36">I.</a>, +is formed by a buttonhole stitch, which loops over +again before taking the next. The pillow-made +ground, No. <a href="#Page_39">II.</a>, shows the threads plaited or twisted +together to form a hexagonal or a diamond-shaped +network. This is all the difference between needle-made +and pillow-made lace, and in itself helps to +identify in many instances its country and period +when it was produced. All the early Italian laces +were Needlepoint, and all the early French laces +were the same. All the Flemish laces (including +Brussels) were pillow-made, and mixed laces in any +of these countries are of later make. Italy adapted +the Flemish pillow-lace, and produced Genoese +and Milanese guipures, in addition to the coarse +imitation of Reticella which she now made by +plaiting threads on the pillow. Brussels adopted +the needle-made motifs and grounds of Italy, and +produced perhaps her finest lace, weaving her beautiful +designs and outlines on the pillow, and afterwards +filling the spaces with needle-made jours and brides, +as in Point d'Angleterre.</p> + +<p>A study of Chart <a href="#Page_39">II.</a> will show the different style +of grounds or réseaux of both Needlepoint and pillow-made +lace, the buttonhole grounds being either of +"brides" with or without picots, or buttonhole +loops, as in Brussels, and Alençon (with a straight +thread whipping across to strengthen the ground),<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">{196}</a></span> +loops buttonholed over all as in Argentan, or made +of tiny worked hexagons with separate buttonholed +threads around them as in Argentella. The pillow-made +grounds are made of two plaited or twisted +threads, except in the case of Valenciennes, when +it is made of four threads throughout (hence its +durability). In Brussels, it will be noted, the threads +are twisted twice to commence the mesh. These +meet two other threads, and are plaited four times, +dividing into two again, and performing the same +twist, the whole making a hexagon rather longer +than round. Mechlin has precisely the same ground, +only that the threads are plaited <i>twice</i> instead of four +times, as in Brussels, making the hexagon roundish +instead of long.</p> + +<p>The ground of Lille lace is of exactly the same +shape as Valenciennes, but is composed of two +threads twisted loosely twice each side of the +diamond, and that of Valenciennes being made of +four threads plaited.</p> + +<p>With the aid of these little charts, a remembrance +of the various styles and a few actual specimens of +lace, and <i>a powerful magnifying glass</i>, it is not beyond +the power of any reader of this little book to become +expert in the identification of old lace.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">{197}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image058.jpg" width="500" height="299" alt="REAL "POINT DE GAZE" (NEEDLE-MADE GROUND). + +(Author's Collection.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">REAL "POINT DE GAZE" (NEEDLE-MADE GROUND). +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">{199}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="L_XIV" id="L_XIV"></a>XIV<br /> +<br /> +SALE<br /> +PRICES</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">{201}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XIV<br /> +<br /> +SALE PRICES</h2> + + +<p>Lace is such an article of luxury, and, as a rule, +only belonging to the wealthiest class, that it seldom +or ever comes into the open market. In 1907 two +collections were dispersed at Christie's—those of +Mrs. Massey-Mainwaring and Mrs. Lewis Hill.</p> + +<p>The most costly laces are the Venetian Points, +some of the fine Rose Points being priceless. It is +so fragile that little of it remains, and the smallest +piece is eagerly snapped up by collectors.</p> + +<p>In 1904 at Christie's lace sold for the following +prices—</p> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='center'>£</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A 58-inch length of 24-ins. deep Point de Venise</td><td align='left'>600</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A 4-yards length of Rose Point, 11 inches deep</td><td align='left'>420</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p>The same year—</p> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='center'>£</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>4 yards of Point d'Argentan, 25 inches deep</td><td align='right'>460</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>44 inches Point d'Alençon, 17 inches deep</td><td align='right'>43</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>2½ yards Point d'Alençon, 14 inches deep</td><td align='right'>46</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">{202}</a></span></p> + +<p>In 1907, March 11, <i>Massey-Mainwaring Sale</i> at +Christie's—</p> + + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='center' colspan='3'>sold for</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>£</td><td align='right'>s.</td><td align='right'>d.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>1½ yards Venetian Gros Point, 8 inches +deep</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>5 yards length of Reticella, 7½ inches +deep</td><td align='right'>33</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>4 short lengths</td><td align='right'>42</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>7 pieces of Point d'Alençon</td><td align='right'>21</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>4 yards narrow Point d'Argentan</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>3 pairs Point d'Argentan lappets</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>30 yards narrow Mechlin in odd lengths</td><td align='right'>21</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p>April 15th, the <i>Lewis-Hill Sale</i> at Christie's:—</p> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right' colspan='3'>sold for</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>£</td><td align='right'>s.</td><td align='right'>d.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>4 yards Venetian Point, 15½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>68</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>4 yards Venetian Point, 8½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>52</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>3 yards Spanish Point, 6½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>73</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An Old Brussels scarf in two pieces</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>6 yards Brussels applique</td><td align='right'>23</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point Gaze parasol-cover</td><td align='right'>6</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Brussels flounce</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>3 yards Honiton flounce, 17 inches deep</td><td align='right'>69</td><td align='right'>6</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Another similar</td><td align='right'>69</td><td align='right'>6</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>6 yards Honiton lace in three pieces</td><td align='right'>24</td><td align='right'>3</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An old lace coverlet</td><td align='right'>25</td><td align='right'>4</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Another ditto</td><td align='right'>26</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A lace altar-frontal</td><td align='right'>21</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p>With the exception of the Honiton flounces, which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">{203}</a></span> +sold beyond their market value, all the above pieces +were bought by London lace dealers!</p> + +<p>The famous collection of the late Mrs. Hailstone +was sold in 1909. This lady had for many years +been known as a lace collector, and the sale of her +effects was eagerly anticipated. The result was extremely +interesting to the collectors, as Mrs. Hailstone +had collected specimen lengths of almost every +known lace. No huge prices obtained, but the sale +may be regarded as representative, and the prices +quoted as being open-market value.</p> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>£</td><td align='right'>s.</td><td align='right'>d.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A set of bed-hangings, forming six curtains, made of Italian lace and +linen</td><td align='right'>40</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A large portière curtain of Italian lacis-work</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point d'Alençon fichu</td><td align='right'>30</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point d'Alençon cravat end, a pair of +sleeves, one odd piece</td><td align='right'>18</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A pair of Argentan lappets and six yards lace</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A panel fine raised Venetian Point, +22 inches wide, 28 inches long</td><td align='right'>24</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Berthe, Point de Venise, 1 yard +120 inches, 12 inches deep</td><td align='right'>25</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point de Venise Berthe</td><td align='right'>36</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A 1 yard 13 inches x 7 inches panel +Venetian lace</td><td align='right'>50</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">{204}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Two specimen pieces, 3¼ inches, all of +Point de Venise à réseau</td><td align='right'>14</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Buckinghamshire collar, sleeves, and pieces</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A specimen of old Honiton, baby's +cap, bodice, and handkerchief</td><td align='right'>3</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An old Honiton baby's robe, said to have belonged to Princess Charlotte</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Seven volumes of lace specimens of +old and modern lace</td><td align='right'>35</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p>In December, 1910, probably the most valuable +collection ever placed upon the market was dispersed +at Messrs. Christie's. The late Sir William Abdy +Bt., had for many years devoted his time and money +to the collection of valuable lace, such as now can +only be seen in the great national collections. The +prices obtained are significant of the huge sums +which must be paid to obtain wearable pieces of +valuable lace such as skirt lengths, 3- or 4-yard +lengths of deep flouncings, shawls, coverlets, aprons, &c.</p> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>£</td><td align='right'>s.</td><td align='right'>d.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A fine Point d'Alençon skirt, 2½ yards, +44 inches deep</td><td align='right'>160</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A fine Point d'Alençon scarf, 2 yards +9 inches × 10 inches deep</td><td align='right'>72</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point d'Argentan Berthe, 9½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>39</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point d'Argentan flounce, 6 yards 30 +inches × 5½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>140</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point d'Argentan flounce, 2 yards 26 +inches long × 25 inches deep</td><td align='right'>210</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">{205}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 28 +inches long × 24 inches deep</td><td align='right'>310</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 35 +inches long × 25 inches deep</td><td align='right'>431</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 16 +inches long × 24½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>290</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An Italian gold and thread lace flounce, +4 yards long, 29 inches deep</td><td align='right'>740</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A length of Italian Rose Point, 4 yards +15 inches long, 3 inches deep</td><td align='right'>70</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An old Italian Rose Point flounce, 3 +yards 31 inches long, 17½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>660</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An old Italian Rose Point square, 31 +inches × 34 inches</td><td align='right'>180</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An old Italian Rose Point flounce, 3 +yards 19 inches long, 7½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>520</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An old Italian Rose Point panel, 34 +inches × 9 inches</td><td align='right'>95</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Point de Venise lappet à réseau, 46 +inches long, 5¼ inches wide</td><td align='right'>22</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Point de Venise trimming, 8 yards long +× 4 inches deep</td><td align='right'>65</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A piece of flat Venetian insertion, 4 +yards × 3¾ inches deep</td><td align='right'>92</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards long × 5 +inches deep</td><td align='right'>200</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Rose Point flounce, 3 yards 31 inches +long × 22 inches deep</td><td align='right'>600</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 7 inches +long × 24 inches deep</td><td align='right'>540</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">{206}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Rose Point flounce, 3 yards 32 inches +long × 15 inches deep</td><td align='right'>560</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 11 inches long × 18 inches deep, and a pair of +sleeves en suite</td><td align='right'>650</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 3 inches +long × 11½ inches deep</td><td align='right'>510</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A raised Point de Venise square, 1 yard +24 inches long × 1 yard 6 inches wide</td><td align='right'>450</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An Old Brussels apron, 41 inches wide, +37 inches deep</td><td align='right'>145</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A specimen piece of early Valenciennes, +2 yards long × 7 inches deep</td><td align='right'>42</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p>The following prices have been given by the South +Kensington authorities for specimens shown:—</p> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>£</td><td align='right'>s.</td><td align='right'>d.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Venetian Point altar-frontal, +8 × 3 feet</td><td align='right'>350</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Venetian chasuble, stole, maniple, +and chalice veil</td><td align='right'>200</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A 2 yards × 5/8 yard Venetian flounce</td><td align='right'>125</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Gros Point collar</td><td align='right'>21</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Brussels lappet</td><td align='right'>23</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A drawn-thread jacket</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'> 10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Linen cutwork tunic</td><td align='right'>20</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +</table></div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">{208}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image059.jpg" width="500" height="318" alt="EGYPTIAN EMBROIDERY. + +Found in a tomb at Thebes." title="" /> +<span class="caption">EGYPTIAN EMBROIDERY. +<br /> +Found in a tomb at Thebes.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">{209}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHATS_ON_NEEDLEWORK" id="CHATS_ON_NEEDLEWORK"></a>CHATS ON NEEDLEWORK</h2> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="N_I" id="N_I"></a>I<br /> +<br /> +OLD ENGLISH EMBROIDERY</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Needlework pioneer art—Neolithic remains—Earliest known +English specimens—Bayeux tapestry.</p></div> + + +<p>While the subject of lace-making has been treated +as almost cosmopolitan, that of embroidery, in this +volume, must be regarded as purely national! I +purposely refrain from introducing the embroideries +of other countries, other than mentioning the ancient +civilisations which shared the initial attempts to +decorate garments, hangings, &c. (of which we really +know very little), and shall confine myself to the +needlework of this country, more especially as it is +the one art and craft of which England may be +unfeignedly proud. It is assumed that needlecraft +was the pioneer art of the whole world, that the early +attempts to decorate textiles by embroideries of +coloured silks, and the elaborate use of gold and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">{210}</a></span> +silver threadwork, first suggested painting, sculpture, +and goldsmith's work. Certainly early Egyptian +paintings imitated embroideries, and we have good +ground for supposing that stained glass was a direct +copy of the old ecclesiastical figures or ancient +church vestments. The Neolithic remains found in +Britain show that at a very early period the art of +making linen-cloth was understood. Fragments of +cloth, both of linen and wool, have been discovered in +a British barrow in Yorkshire, and early bone needles +found at different parts of the country are plentiful in +our museums. There is no doubt that we owe much +of our civilisation to the visit of the Phœnicians, those +strange people, who appear to have carried all the +arts and crafts of ancient Babylon and Assyria to +the wonder isles of the Greek Archipelago, to Egypt, +to Southern Spain, and to Cornwall and Devonshire. +These people, dwelling on the maritime border of +Palestine, were the great traders of their age, and +while coming to this country (then in a state of +wildest barbarism) for tin left in exchange a knowledge +of the arts and appliances of civilisation +hitherto not understood. The Roman Invasion +(45 <span class="smcap lowercase">B.C.</span>) brought not only knowledge of craftsmanship +but also Christianity. St. Augustine, to whom the +conversion of the Britains is credited, carried with him +a banner embroidered with the image of Christ. After +the Romans had left the country, and it had become +invaded by the Celts and the Danes, and had again +been taken possession of by the Saxons, a period of +not only rest but advancement arrived, and we see +early in the seventh century the country prosperous<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">{211}</a></span> +and settled. Aldhelm, Bishop of Sherborne, wrote a +poem in which he speaks of the tapestry-weaving and +the embroidery which the women of England occupied +their lives.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image060.jpg"><img src="images/image060.jpg" width="500" height="104" alt="A LENGTH OF THE FAMOUS BAYEUX TAPESTRY." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">A LENGTH OF THE FAMOUS BAYEUX TAPESTRY.</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">{213}</a></span>The earliest specimen of embroidery known to +have been executed in England is that of the stole +and maniple of St. Cuthbert, which is now +treasured at Durham Cathedral. These were worked +by Aelfled, the Queen of Edward the Elder, Alfred +the Great's son. She worked them for Bishop +Fridhestan in 905 <span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span> Her son Athelstan, after her +death, visited the shrine of St. Cuthbert, at Chester-le-street, +and in an inventory of the rich gifts which +he left there, there is recorded "one stole with a +maniple," amongst other articles. These very +embroideries were removed from the actual body of +St. Cuthbert in 1827. They are described by an eyewitness +as being "of woven gold, with spaces left +vacant for needlework embroideries." Exquisitely +embroidered figures are in niches or clouds. The +whole effect is described as being that of a fine +illuminated MS. of the ninth century, and indescribably +beautiful. Another great prelate, St. +Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, designed +embroideries for the execution of pious ladies of +his diocese (924 <span class="smcap lowercase">A.D.</span>).</p> + +<p>Emma, Queen of Ethelred the Unready, and afterwards +of Canute, designed and embroidered many +church vestments and altar-cloths, and Editha, wife +of Edward the Confessor, embroidered the King's +coronation mantle.</p> + +<p>The great and monumental Bayeux tapestry<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">{214}</a></span>—which +is miscalled, as it is <i>embroidery</i>—was the work +of Queen Matilda, who, like Penelope, wove the +mighty deeds of her husband and king in an immense +embroidery. This piece of needlecraft comes +upon us as a shock, rather than an admiration, after +the exquisite embroideries worked by and for the +Church. It is interesting, however, as a valuable +historic "document," showing the manners and +customs of the time. The canvas is 227 feet long +and 20 inches wide, and shows events of English +history from the accession of Edward the Confessor +to the defeat of Harold, at Hastings. It is extremely +crude; no attempt is made at shading, the figures +being worked in flat stitch in coloured wools, on +linen canvas. Certainly it is one of the quaintest +and most primitive attempts of working pictures by +needlecraft.</p> + +<p>The evidence of the costumes, the armour, &c., are +supposed to tell us that this tapestry was worked many +years after the Conquest, but it can be traced by +documentary evidence as having been seen in Bayeux +Cathedral as far back as 1476. In the time of +Napoleon I. it was removed from the cathedral and +was actually used as a covering for a transport +waggon. Finally, however, it was exhibited in the +Musée Napoleon, in 1803, and was afterwards +returned to Bayeux. In 1840 it was restored and +relined, and is now in the Hôtel de Ville at Bayeux!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">{215}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 418px;"> +<img src="images/image061.jpg" width="418" height="500" alt="KING HAROLD. + +(From the Bayeux Tapestry.)" title="" /> +<span class="caption">KING HAROLD. +<br /> +(From the Bayeux Tapestry.)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">{217}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_II" id="N_II"></a>II<br /> +<br /> +THE GREAT<br /> +PERIOD OF<br /> +EMBROIDERY</h2> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">{219}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></a></span></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>II<br /> +<br /> +THE GREAT PERIOD OF EMBROIDERY</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"Opus Anglicanum"—The Worcester fragments—St. Benedict—Legend +of Pope Innocent—The "Jesse" cope—The "Syon" cope.</p></div> + + +<p>The great period of English embroidery is supposed +to have been from the twelfth to the thirteenth +century. Very little remains to show this, except a +few fragments of vestments from the tombs of the +bishops dating from the twelfth and thirteenth +centuries, and other data obtained from various +foreign inventories of later date referring to the use +of "Opus Anglicanum." Some portion of the +Worcester fragments may be seen in the South +Kensington Museum, and can only be described as +being so perfect in workmanship, colour, and style as +even at this day to be more like a magnificent piece +of goldsmith's work than that of needlecraft. The +background is apparently one mass of thread of fine +gold worked in and out of a silken mesh, the +embroidery appearing just as clear and neat in +manipulation as an illumination. The coloured +photographs, which may be seen in the same room,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">{220}</a></span> +of the stole and maniple of St. Cuthbert are of +precisely the same work. Judging from these, and +the embroidered orphrey which the authorities +bought from the Hockon Collection for £119 1s. 10d. +and which is only 4 feet 8 inches long, there is no +doubt that this was, <i>par excellence</i>, the finest period. +The work can only be described as being like an old +Italian painting on a golden ground. We see precisely +such design and colouring in ancient paintings +for altars as in the old Italian Triptychs. This style +was carried out as literally as possible. Even the +defects, if so they may be called, are there, and a +slight topheaviness of the figures serves but to accentuate +the likeness.</p> + +<p>There is a legend that during the times of the +Danish incursions St. Benedict travelled backwards +and forwards through France and Italy, and brought +with him during his <i>seven</i> journeys artificers in <i>glass</i> +and <i>stone</i>, besides costly books and copies of the +Scriptures. The chief end and aim of monastic life, +both of monk and nun, in those early days was to +embroider, paint, and illuminate their sacred books, +vestments, and edifices with what was to them a +newly-inspired faith.</p> + +<p>Dr. Rock, in his "Church of Our Fathers," says +that from the twelfth century to the time of Henry +VIII. that only the best materials that could be +found in our country or that of other lands were +employed, and that the art that was used on them +was the best that could be learnt or given. The +original fabrics often came from Byzantium or were +of Saracenic origin.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">{221}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 362px;"> +<img src="images/image062.jpg" width="362" height="500" alt="FROM THE "JESSE" COPE (South Kensington Museum). + +English, early Fourteenth Century." title="" /> +<span class="caption">FROM THE "JESSE" COPE (<i>South Kensington Museum</i>). +<br /> +English, early Fourteenth Century.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">{223}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222"></a></span></p> + +<p>The story of Pope Innocent III., who, seeing +certain vestments and orphreys, and being informed +that they were English, said, "Surely England must +be a garden of delight!" must be quoted to show how +English work was appreciated in those early days.</p> + +<p>The choicest example in this country of this +glorious period of English embroidery is the famous +Syon cope, which is supposed to rank as the most +magnificent garment belonging to the Church. It +may be regarded as a typical example of real +English work, the "Opus Anglicanum" or "Anglicum," +which, although used for other purposes, such +as altar-cloths and altar-frontals, found apparently +its fullest scope in these large semicircular mantles.</p> + +<p>Amongst the many copes treasured at South +Kensington there are none, amidst all their splendour, +as fine as this, although the fragment of the "Jesse" +cope runs it very closely. There are many copes of +this period in different parts of the Continent—the +Daroca Cope at Madrid, one at Ascagni, another +at Bologna, at St. Bertrand-de-Comminges, at "St. +John Lateran" at Rome, at Pienza and Toleda, +and a fragment of one with the famous altar-frontal +at Steeple Aston. These are all assumed +to be of "Opus Anglicanum," and they may be +described as being technically perfect, the stitches +being of fine small tambour stitch, beautifully even, +and the draperies exquisitely shaded.</p> + +<p>The illustration showing the Syon Cope requires +some little explanation. It is wrought on linen, +embroidered all over with gold and silver thread and +coloured silk. It is 9 feet 7 inches long, 4 feet 8 inches<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">{224}</a></span> +wide. The whole of the cope except the border +is covered with interlacing quatrefoils outlined in +gold. The ground of these quatrefoils is covered +with red silk and the spaces between them with +green silk. Each quatrefoil is filled with scenes +from the life of Christ, the Virgin, and figures of +St. Michael and of the Apostles. On the green +spaces are worked figures of six-winged angels standing +on whorls. The chief place on the quatrefoils +is given to the crucifixion, where the body of the +Saviour is worked in silver and cloth of gold. The +Virgin, arrayed in green tunic and golden mantle, is +on one side and St. John, in gold, on the other. +Above the quatrefoil is another representing the +Redeemer seated on a cushioned throne with the +Virgin, and below another representing St. Michael +overcoming Satan. Other quatrefoils show "Christ +appearing to St. Mary Magdalen," "The Burial +of the Virgin," "The Coronation of the Virgin," +"The Death of the Virgin with the Apostles surrounding +her," "The Incredulity of St. Thomas," +"St. Simon," "St. Bartholomew," "St. Peter," "St. +Paul," "St. Thomas," "St. Andrew," and "St. James." +Portions of four other Apostles may be seen, but +at some period the cope has been cut down. In its +original state the cope showed the twelve Apostles. +The lower portion has been cut away and reshaped, +and round this is an edging apparently made out of +a stole and maniple which point to a later date, +as they are worked chiefly in cross-stitch. On the +orphrey are emblazoned the arms of Warwick, Castile +and Leon, Ferrars, Geneville Everard, the badge of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">{225}</a></span> +the Knights Templars, Clifford, Spencer, Lindsay, +Le Botelier, Sheldon, Monteney of Essex, Champernoun, +Everard, Tyddeswall Grandeson, Fitz Alan, +Hampden, Percy, Clanvowe, Ribbesford, Bygod, +Roger de Mortimer, Grove, B. Bassingburn, and +many others not recognisable. These coats of arms, +it is suggested, belonged to the noble dames who +worked the border. The angels which fill the intervening +spaces are of the six-winged varieties, each +standing on whorls or wheels.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image063.jpg"><img src="images/image063.jpg" width="500" height="297" alt="THE "SYON" COPE." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">THE "SYON" COPE. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">{227}</a></span>The cope is worked in a fine tambour or chain +stitch principally. All the faces, bodies, and draperies +are composed of this. A specially noticeable point is +that the faces are worked spirally, beginning in the +centre of the cheek and being worked round and +round, conforming with the muscles of the face. The +garments are worked according to the hang of the +drapery, very fine effects being obtained. After the +work has been completed a hot iron something like a +little iron rod with a bulbous end has been pressed +into the cheeks, under the throat, and in different +parts of the nude body. Occasionally, but seldom, +the same device may be seen in the drapery. All +the work is exquisitely fine and perfectly even. The +groundwork of the quatrefoils is of gold-laid or +"couch" work, as is also that of the armorial bearings.</p> + +<p>The name "Syon" is somewhat misleading, as the +Cope was not made here, but came into the hands of +the Bridgettine nuns in 1414, when Henry V. founded +the convent of "Syon" at Isleworth. Its origin +and date will ever be a matter of conjecture, but +Dr. Rock infers that Coventry may have been the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">{228}</a></span> +place of its origin. Taking Coventry as a centre +with a small radius, several of the great feudal houses +the arms of which are on the border of the cope may +be found, and Dr. Rock further supposes that Eleanor, +widow of Edward the First, may have become a +sister of the fraternity unknown, as her arms, Castile +and Leon, are on it. "The whole must have taken +long in working, and the probability is that it was +embroidered by nuns of some convent which stood +on or near Coventry." However this may be, it is +certain that this splendid piece of English work +came into the hands, by some means, of the nuns of +Syon, and after remaining with them at Isleworth till +Elizabeth's time, it was carried by them through +Flanders, France, and Portugal. They remained +at the latter place till the same persecution which +dispersed the famous Spanish Point lace over the +length and breadth of the Continent, and about +eighty years ago it was brought back to England, +and was given by the remaining members of the +Order to the Earl of Shrewsbury. After further +vicissitudes of a varied character it was bought by +the South Kensington Museum for £110, and now +sheds the glory of its golden threads in a dark +transept unnoticed except by the student.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">{229}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_III" id="N_III"></a>III<br /> +<br /> +ECCLESIASTICAL<br /> +EMBROIDERIES<br /> +AND<br /> +VESTMENTS</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">{232}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></a></span></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image064.jpg"><img src="images/image064.jpg" width="500" height="344" alt="HALF OF THE STEEPLE ASTON ALTAR FRONTAL." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">HALF OF THE STEEPLE ASTON ALTAR FRONTAL. +<br /> +English, Fourteenth Century.</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">{233}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>III<br /> +<br /> +ECCLESIASTICAL EMBROIDERIES AND VESTMENTS</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>The Pierpont Morgan purchase—The Steeple Aston Altar-frontal—The +"Nevil" Altar-frontal at S. K. M.—City +palls—Diagram of vestments.</p></div> + + +<p>Other copes of the same period are in the Madrid +Museum, two copes at Bologna, and the "Ascoli" +cope recently purchased by Mr. J. Pierpont +Morgan and generously returned by him. Some +cushions from Catworth Church, Huntingdon, now +at the South Kensington Museum, were probably +cut from copes, and bought by permission of the +Bishop of Ely for £27. A long band of red +velvet at South Kensington Museum embroidered +with gold and silver and coloured silk has evidently +been made from the "Apparels" of an alb. +It is in two pieces, each piece depicting five scenes +divided by broad arches. The first five are from +the life of the Virgin, and are: "The Angel appearing +to Anna," "The Meeting of Anna and Joachim," +"Birth of the Virgin," "Presentation of the Virgin," +"Education of the Virgin." In the second piece +are: "The Annunciation," "The Salutation," "The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">{234}</a></span> +Nativity," "The Angel appearing to the Shepherds," +and the "Journey of the Magi."</p> + +<p>Another piece of similar work is the altar-frontal +of Steeple Aston, which was originally a cope, and +the cope now at Stonyhurst College, originally +belonging to Westminster Cathedral. It is made of +one seamless piece of gold tissue.</p> + +<p>During this great period of English embroidery +certain characteristics along with its superb workmanship +must be noticed. The earlier the work the +finer the modelling of the figures. In the figures +of the St. Cuthbert and the Worcester fragments +the proportions of the figures are exquisite; at +a later date, while the work is just as excellent, +the figures become unnatural, the heads being +unduly large, the eyes staring, and the perspective +entirely out of drawing. Until the fourteenth +century this comes so gradually as to be +scarcely noted; but after and through the fifteenth +century this becomes so marked as to be almost +grotesque, and only the genuine religious fervour +with which these poor remnants have been +worked prevents many of them being ridiculous. +The faces gradually show less careful drawing +and working, and the figures become squat and +topheavy. The emblems of the saints are often +omitted.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">{235}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image065.jpg"><img src="images/image065.jpg" width="500" height="335" alt="THE "NEVIL" ALTAR FRONTAL." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">THE "NEVIL" ALTAR FRONTAL. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>This decline in the embroiderer's art is specially +noticeable in an extraordinary panel to be seen +at South Kensington Museum, where an altar-frontal +of stamped crimson velvet is appliqued in groups +of figures in gold, silver, and silks. In the middle is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">{237}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></a></span> +the Crucifixion, with the Virgin and St. John standing +on a strip covered with flowers. On the left +is Ralph Nevil, fourth Earl of Westmoreland, 1523, +kneeling, and behind him his seven sons. On the +right is Lady Catherine Stafford, his wife, also +kneeling, and behind her kneel her thirteen +daughters. The frontal cost the museum £50 +and is well worth it as an historical document. +Other important embroideries of the period to be +found in England are at Cirencester Cathedral, +Ely Cathedral, Salisbury and Carlisle Cathedrals, +Chipping Norton and Little Dean in Gloucestershire, +East Langdon in Kent, Buckland and +Stourton in Worcester, Littleworth in Leicestershire, +Lynn in Norfolk, and the Parish Church +at Warrington.</p> + +<p>Many of the palls belonging to the great city +companies belong to this date. The Saddlers' +Company's pall is of crimson velvet embroidered +with angels surrounding "I.H.S.," and arms of the +Company. The Fishmongers' Pall, made at the end +of the fifteenth century, has at one end the figure of +St. Peter (the patron saint of fishermen) enthroned, +and angels on either side, and at the other end +St. Peter receiving the keys from our Lord. The +Vintners' Pall is made of Italian velvet and cloth +of gold and embroidered with St. Martin of +Tours.</p> + +<p>Religious influence characterised the embroideries +of England practically from the ninth to the +sixteenth centuries. Practically all needlework +prior to 1600 is entirely ecclesiastical, and from its<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">{238}</a></span> +limited range in choice of subjects barely does +justice to the fine work this period produced.</p> + +<p>Dr. Rock says that "few persons of the present +day have the faintest idea of the labour, the +money, the time, often bestowed on old embroideries +which had been designed by the hands of +men and women each in their own craft the best +and ablest of the day."</p> + +<p>We do not know the length of time these ancient +vestments occupied in the making, but twenty-six +years is stated to be the period of making the vestments +for the Church of San Giovanni, in Florence. +This is all worked in close stitches similar to our +English work.</p> + + +<h3><i>Ancient Church Vestments.</i></h3> + +<p>The names of the ecclesiastical vestments are +somewhat puzzling to those of us who do not belong +to the Romish Church, or even to the English +High Church. The vestments described are, we +believe, in use in the Romish churches now as in +the early times when church embroidery was the +pleasure and the labour of all classes of English +women. The accompanying diagram will better +illustrate the use of these vestments than a page +of writing.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">{240}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></a></span></p> + + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 232px;"> +<img src="images/image066.jpg" width="232" height="500" alt="ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS." title="" /> +<span class="caption">ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS. +<br /> +1. Amice.<br /> +2. Orphreys.<br /> +3. Chasuble.<br /> +4. Sleeves of Alb.<br /> +5 and 9. Apparel of Alb.<br /> +6. Maniple.<br /> +7. Stole.<br /> +8. Alb.<br /> +<br /> +From "A Guide to Ecclesiastical Law," +by kind permission of Mr. Henry Miller.</span> +</div> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>The Alb is often trimmed handsomely with lace, +the apparels are stitched on to the front. The +Stoles ought to have three crosses embroidered on +it and be 3 yards long. Over this comes the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">{241}</a></span> +Chasuble, which is the last garment the priest +puts on before celebrating Mass. The Cope is a +huge semi-circular 10 ft. wide cape. The Maniple +is a strip of embroidery 3 ft. 4 in. long worn over +the left wrist of the priest.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">{243}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 317px;"> +<a href="images/full_image067.jpg"><img src="images/image067.jpg" width="317" height="500" alt="ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS" title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS. +<br /> +English, Fifteenth or early Sixteenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">{245}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_IV" id="N_IV"></a>IV<br /> +<br /> +TUDOR<br /> +EMBROIDERY</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">{247}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>IV<br /> +<br /> +TUDOR EMBROIDERY</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>The influences of the Reformation—Queen Catherine of +Aragon's needlecraft—The gorgeous clothes of +Henry VIII.—Field of the Cloth of Gold—Queen +Elizabeth's embroideries.</p></div> + + +<p>After the Reformation and the wholesale destruction +of the cathedrals, monasteries, and churches, +the gentle dames of England found their occupation +gone. The priestly vestments, the sumptuous altar-cloths, +and gorgeous hangings were now needless. +Those which had been the glory of their owners, +and the pictorial representations of Biblical life to the +uneducated masses of people, had been ruthlessly +torn down and destroyed for the sake of the gold +to be found on them. As in the time immediately +preceding the French Revolution, costly embroideries +were unpicked, and the amount of gold and silver +obtained from them became a source of income and +profit to their destroyers.</p> + +<p>Apart from her household, women had no other +interests in those days, unless we accept such +anomalies as Lady Jane Grey, who was a marvel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">{248}</a></span> +of learning and wisdom. All their long leisure +hours had been spent, not in improving their minds, +but in beautifying the churches with specimens of +their skill. Catherine of Aragon, one of the unfortunate +queens of Henry VIII., was a notable needlewoman, +and spent much of her short, unhappy time +as Queen of England in embroidery. The lace-making +of Northampton is said to have been +commenced by her during her period of retirement +after her divorce. The "Spanish stitch," which was +known and used in embroidery of that period, was +introduced by her from her own country, and many +examples of her skill in embroidery are to be seen in +the British Museum and the various homes belonging +to our old nobility.</p> + +<p>During the reign of Henry VIII. dress became +very sumptuous, as the contemporary pictures of the +times show. Indeed, all the fervour and feeling +which ladies had worked in religious vestments now +seemed to find refuge in the over-elaboration of +personal wear. Very little lace was used, and that +of only a primitive description, so that effect was +produced by embroidery in gold and silver threads +and the use of pearls and precious stones. The +dress of the nobles in the time of Henry VIII. +was especially gorgeous, the coats being thickly +padded and quilted with gold bullion thread, costly +jewels afterwards being sewn in the lozenges. It is +related that after his successful divorce King Henry +gave a banquet to celebrate his marriage to Anne +Boleyn, and wore a coat covered with the jewelled +letters "H," and in the height of his satisfaction<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">{249}</a></span> +allowed the ladies to cut or tear away the jewels as +souvenirs of his triumph over Wolsey and Catherine. +It is said that he was left in his underwear, so great +was the competition for these favours! Robes made +of gold tissue, then called Cloth of Gold, were used, +and in Henry's meeting with Francis I. the English +and French armies vied with each other as to which +should present a greater magnificence. The name +"the Field of the Cloth of Gold" remains as a +guarantee of its splendour.</p> + +<p>Under the more austere and religious rule of +Queen Mary we might suppose that ecclesiastical +embroidery would have somewhat regained a foothold. +But the landmarks had been entirely swept +away, and we have little to record of the reign, +except that Mary herself was a clever needlewoman +and worked much of her heartache, at the neglect of +her Spanish husband, into her needlework. Her +jealousy of her sister Elizabeth caused the latter to +spend her life away from the pomps and ceremonies +of the Court, and she has left many records of her +handiwork, some well authenticated, as, for example, +the two exquisite book-covers in the British Museum. +Queen Elizabeth cannot, however, be said to have +been in any way a patroness of the art of needlecraft. +Her talent seems rather to have been devoted to +affairs of State—and her wardrobe! On her death, +at seventy years of age, she left over one thousand +dresses, most of which must have been a cruel weight, +so overburdened were they with stiff bullion and +trimmed with large pearls and jewels. Her dresses +were literally diapered with gold and silver "gimps"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">{250}</a></span> +inset with heavier stones, but little real embroidery is +shown.</p> + +<p>Mary Queen of Scots, on the contrary, was a born +needlewoman. During her married life in France +she learned the gentle arts of embroidery and lace-making, +accomplishments which, as in many humbler +women's lives, have served their owners in good stead +in times of loneliness and trouble. The Duke of +Devonshire possesses specimens of Queen Mary's +skill, worked during the long, dreary days of her +imprisonment at Fotheringay. It is said that Queen +Elizabeth was not above helping herself to the +wardrobe and laces that the unfortunate Queen of +Scotland brought with her from France.</p> + +<p>Much embroidery must have been worked for the +adornment of the house after the Reformation, but +beyond an occasional old inventory nothing is left +to show it. After the Reformation greater luxury +in living obtained, and instead of the clean or rush-strewn +floors some kind of floor-covering was used. +Furniture became much more ornamental, and the +use of hangings for domestic purposes was common. +Not a thread of these hand-worked hangings remain, +but we have the immense and immediate use of +tapestry, which first became a manufacture of England +in the reign of Henry VIII. It is easy to +conceive that English women would readily seize +upon the idea supplied in tapestry and adapt its +designs to that of embroidery. It is certain that +hangings for the old four-post beds were embroidered, +as in the inventory of Wolsey's great palace +at Hampton Court there is mention of 230 bed-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">{251}</a></span>hangings +of English embroidery. Nothing of this +remains, so that its style is simply conjectural; and +we can only suppose these hangings to have been +replicas of the magnificent velvet and satin hangings, +covered with laid or couched gold and silver threads, +such as Catherine of Aragon would bring with her +from Spain. This also would account for their absolute +disappearance. The value of the gold and silver +in embroidery has always been a fertile source of +wealth to the destroyer of ancient fabrics, while many +embroideries worked only in silks have escaped this +vandalism.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">{253}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_V" id="N_V"></a>V<br /> +<br /> +EARLY<br /> +NEEDLEWORK<br /> +PICTURES AND<br /> +ACCESSORIES</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">{256}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254"></a></span></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image068.jpg"><img src="images/image068.jpg" width="500" height="244" alt="EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE. +<br /> +Late Sixteenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">{257}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>V<br /> +<br /> +EARLY NEEDLEWORK PICTURES AND ACCESSORIES</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"Petit point"—old list of stitches—Stuart bags—Gloves—Shoes—Caps.</p></div> + + +<p>Towards the end of James I.'s reign it is supposed +that the earliest needlework pictures appeared. +They were obviously literal copies of the tapestries +which had now become of general use in the homes +of the wealthy, being worked in what is known as +"petit point," or "little stitch." This stitch was +worked on canvas of very close quality, with fine +silk thread, one stitch only being taken over the +junction of the warp and the weft of the canvas +instead of the "cross stitch" of later days. Very +few of these specimens are left of an early date. +A panel, measuring 30 inches by 16 inches, in perfect +condition, and dated 1601, was sold at Christie's +Rooms this year for £115. The purchaser, Mr. +Stoner, of King Street, sold it next day at a very +considerable profit.</p> + +<p>At this period the workers of these pictures did +not draw upon Biblical subjects for their inspiration<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">{258}</a></span> +(with great advantage to the picture, it may be +stated). The subjects were either fanciful adaptations +from real life, with the little people dressed in +contemporary costume, or dainty little mythological +subjects, such as the "Judgment of Paris," "Corydon +wooing Phyllis," with most absurd little castles of +Tudor construction in impossible landscapes, where +the limpid stream meandered down fairy-like hills +into a shining lake, which held dolphins under the +water and water-fowl above it. The illustration +depicts such a specimen, and shows one of these +tiny pictures worked in no less than ten different +stitches of lacework, in addition to the usual petit +point. The number of these stitches is legion. In +the reign of Charles I., John Taylor, the water-poet, +wrote in 1640:</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"For tent worke, raised worke, first worke, laid worke, net worke,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Most curious purl, or rare Italian cut worke,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Fire, ferne stitch, finny stitch, new stitch, chain stitch,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Brave bred stitch, fisher stitch, Irish stitch, and Queen stitch,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The Spanish stitch, Rosemary stitch, and mowle stitch,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">The smarting whip stitch, back stitch, and cross stitch;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">All these are good, and this we must allow,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And they are everywhere in practice now."<br /></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">{259}</a></span> +</div></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image069.jpg"><img src="images/image069.jpg" width="500" height="327" alt="VERY EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">VERY EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>These are not <i>all</i> the stitches in vogue during the +first era of needlework pictures. A single glance at +one of the early specimens, though it may not <i>charm</i>, +fills one with amazement at the amount of toil, +ingenuity, patience, and downright <i>love</i> for the work +the ancient needlewoman must have possessed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">{261}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></a></span> +Not only pictures, however, were made in petit +point. Many dainty little accessories of the toilet +gave scope to the delicate fancy and nimble fingers +of the ladies who had found solace from the cessation +of their labours for the priesthood in making dainty +little handbags and other pretty articles, each a marvel +of minute handicraft. One bag in my possession measures +only four inches square, and is worked on +fine canvas, about forty threads to the square inch, +the design being the favourite Tudor rose, each petal +worked in lace stitch, and raised from the centre which +is made of knots worked with golden hair, flat green +leaves exquisitely shaded, and a charming bit of the +worker's skill in the shape of a pea's pod, open and +raised, showing the tiny little peas in a row. An +exquisitely worked butterfly with raised wings in +lace stitch is on the other side. The grounding of +the whole is run with flat gold thread, making a +"cloth of gold" ground, strings made of similarly +worked canvas, with gold thread and silk tassels +complete a bag fit for the Princess Golden Locks of +our fairy tales. This little bag cost the writer +5 guineas, and was cheap at the price. The South +Kensington Museum have several specimens, and +although many are very exquisite, there is not one +quite so perfect in design nor in such condition. +Other little trifles made in similar style are the +embroidered gauntlets of the buff leather glove worn +at the time. These have become rarer than any +other embroideries, as they were not merely for +ornament but for actual wear. Four or five of these +gauntlet gloves are in the South Kensington Collec<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">{262}</a></span>tion, +but are of a later date than the "petit point" +period.</p> + +<p>The use of gloves in England was not very general, +we may infer, in the earlier ages of embroidery. +There are certain evidences, however, showing that +the glove was part of the priestly outfit, remains of +gloves having been found on the bones of Thomas à +Becket when they were transferred from the crypt +of Canterbury Cathedral to the special shrine prepared +for them; and a crimson leather pair, bearing +the sacred monogram in embroidered gold, are preserved +in the New College, Oxford, belonging to the +founder, William of Wykeham, who opened the +college in 1386.</p> + +<p>It was not until the fourteenth century that the +wearing of gloves became general, and practically +nothing remains to show what manner of hand-covering +was worn until the Tudor period. Henry VIII. +was exceptionally lavish and extravagant in the use +of handsomely embroidered gloves, and few of his +portraits show him without a sumptuous glove in +one hand. He had gloves for all functions—like a +modern fashionable woman. A pair of hawking +gloves belonging to him are in the Ashmolean +Museum, Oxford, and in South Kensington is one of +a pair presented by Henry to his friend and Councillor +Sir Anthony Denny. It is of buff, thin leather, +with a white satin gauntlet, embroidered with blue +and red silk in applique work, decorated with seed-pearls +and spangles, and trimmed with gold lace. +The Tudor rose, the crown, and the lion are +worked amidst a splendour of gold and pearls.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">{263}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 255px;"> +<a href="images/full_image070.jpg"><img src="images/image070.jpg" width="255" height="500" alt="A STUART GLOVE." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">A STUART GLOVE. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">{265}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264"></a></span></p> + +<p>Queen Elizabeth must have inherited her love for +gorgeous apparel along with her strong personality +and masterful spirit, as her expenditure for gloves +alone was proverbial. The favourite offering to her +was a pair of gloves, but she was not above accepting +shoes, handkerchiefs, laces, and even gowns from her +faithful and admiring subjects. On her visit to +Oxford in 1578 she was presented by the Chancellor +of the University with a pair of perfumed gloves, +embroidered with gold and set with jewels, which +cost the University sixty shillings, an immense sum +in those days. Other historic gloves are in the +various museums of the country, seldom or never +coming into the open market. In the Braikenridge +Collection sold at Christie's in February of +this year I was able to secure one for £2 12s. 6d., +immediately afterwards being offered double the +price for it.</p> + +<p>The gloves belonging to Charles I. and Queen +Henrietta Maria were very ornamental, and it is +said that even Oliver Cromwell, with all his austerity, +was not proof against the fascination of the +decorated glove.</p> + +<p>With Charles II. the embroidered gloves seem to +have vanished along with the stumpwork pictures, +of which more anon.</p> + +<p>Dainty shoes were embroidered in those old times. +These, being articles of wear, like the gloves, are very +rare. The same fine petit point work is seen on +them; seed-pearls and in-run gold threads adorn +them, and frequently the Tudor rose, in raised work, +forms the shoe knot. Two pairs in Lady Wolseley's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">{266}</a></span> +Collection, sold in 1906, fetched six guineas, and +nine and a half guineas. Tiny pocket-books were +covered with this pretty work, and charming covers +almost as fresh as when they were worked are occasionally +unearthed, made to hold the old-fashioned +housekeeping and cooking books.</p> + +<p>One wonders oftentime how many, and yet, alas! +how few, specimens of this old petit point work have +been preserved. It is only during recent years that +the "cult of the antique" has been fashionable, and +is also becoming a source of income and profit to +the many who indulge in its quest. Only members +of learned antiquarian societies or born reliquaries +troubled themselves to acquire ancient articles of +historic interest because they were <i>old</i>, and served +to form the sequence in the fairy tales of Time. +Anything "old" was ruthlessly destroyed, as being +either past wear, shabby, or old-fashioned, and +countless treasures, both in ecclesiastical and secular +art, have at all periods been recklessly destroyed for +the sake of their intrinsic value in gold or jewels. +In the early days of my life I was allowed to pick +out the corals and seed-pearls from an old Stuart +needle picture "for a doll's necklace!" the picture +itself probably going into the "rag-bag" of the mid-Victorian +good housekeeper.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">{267}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_VI" id="N_VI"></a>VI<br /> +<br /> +STUART<br /> +CASKETS<br /> +AND<br /> +MIRRORS</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">{269}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>VI<br /> +<br /> +STUART CASKETS AND MIRRORS</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Secret drawers and hidden receptacles—High prices in the +Salerooms.</p></div> + + +<p>Among the many treasures of this exquisite period +of needlecraft are the well-known Stuart caskets. +Very interesting and valuable are these charming +boxes, many of them being in a fine state of +preservation, owing to their having been enclosed +in either a wooden or leathern box specially made +to contain them. These queer little boxes are +frequently made in the shape of Noah's ark. The +lid being raised, a fitted mirror is disclosed. The +mirror slides out, and a secret recess may be discovered +to hold letters. The front falls down, +disclosing any number of tiny drawers, each drawer +being silk-lined and the front of it embroidered. +Here, again, we may look for secret drawers. Very +seldom does the drawer run to the width of the +cabinet, but by removing every drawer and carefully +searching for springs or slides many a tiny recess is +disclosed, where costly jewels, and perhaps a love-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">{270}</a></span>gage, +has reposed safely from the sight of unworthy +eyes.</p> + +<p>Every square inch of these caskets is covered with +embroidery, sometimes in canvas, worked with the +usual scriptural or mythological design, and in others +with white satin, exquisitely embroidered with figures +and floral subjects. Those in best preservation have +been covered with mica, which has preserved both +the colour and the fabric. The fittings are generally +of silver. On the few occasions when these boxes or +caskets come into the market high prices are +realised. Messrs. Christie last year obtained £40 +for a good specimen. I have never seen one sold +under £30, and as much as £100 has been given.</p> + +<p>Another pretty fancy was to cover small trays, +presumably for the work or dressing table, with +embroidery. Not many of these remain, the wear +of removing them from place to place having been +too much for their staying powers. One in my +possession is a small hexagonal tray with raised +sides, embroidered in coloured silks in floral design, +on what was once white satin. It is by no means +a thing of beauty now, but as a specimen it is interesting, +and "a poor thing, but mine own," which +covers a multitude of shortcomings in these old +relics, fortunately.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">{271}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 399px;"> +<img src="images/image071.jpg" width="399" height="500" alt=""STUART" MIRROR FRAME." title="" /> +<span class="caption">"STUART" MIRROR FRAME. +<br /> +(<i>Lady Wolseley's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>Far more frequently met with, though quite +prohibitive in price, are the Stuart embroidered +mirrors, which easily command £80 to £100 in +the salerooms. They are generally set in a frame of +oak, leaving five or six inches (which would otherwise +be covered with carving or veneer) for the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">{273}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272"></a></span> +embroidery. The mirror itself is comparatively small, +being only a secondary consideration, and often little +remains of it for its original purpose, as the glass +is blurred and the silvering gone. Many of these +mirrors have <i>bevelled</i> glass, which, of course, is +wrong.</p> + +<p>The mirror shown in the illustration is one +recently belonging to Viscountess Wolseley and sold +by her, among other Stuart needlework specimens, at +Messrs. Puttick & Simpson's in 1906. This mirror +sold for £100. The figures represent Charles I. +and Queen Henrietta Maria, one on either side of +the mirror. The figure at the top of the frame is +difficult to understand; whether she is an angel or +a mere Court lady must be left to conjecture. The +rolling clouds and the blazing sun are above her +head, and a peacock, with tail displayed, is on one +side and a happy-looking stag on the other. Two +royal residences adorn the topmost panels on +either side, with all their bravery of flying flags +and smoking chimneys, and the lion and the leopard +occupy the lower panels. The latter animal identifies +the King and Queen, who might otherwise be +Charles II. and his consort, as after Charles I.'s time +the leopard gave place to the unicorn for some unexplained +reason. Other typical little Stuart animals +and birds fill in the extra panels, such as the +spotted dog who chases a little hare who is never +caught, and the gaily-coloured parroquet and kingfisher, +which no respectable Stuart picture would be +without. The caterpillar, the ladybird, and the snail +are all <i>en evidence</i>; and below is a real pond,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">{274}</a></span> +covered with talc, and containing fish and ducks, +the banks being made of tiny branching coral beads +and tufted silk and bullion work.</p> + +<p>About this time, when Venetian lace came into +fashionable use as an adjunct to the exquisite Stuart +dress, tiny coloured beads were imported from Venice. +The embroiderers at once seized upon them as a new +and possibly more lasting means of showing their +pretty fancies in design. Many delightful specimens +of these beadwork pictures are preserved, the colours, +of course, being as fresh as yesterday. The ground +was always of white satin, now faded and discoloured +with age, and often torn with the heaviness of the +beadwork design. They are scarcely so charming +as the all needlework pictures, but still are delightful +and covetable articles. The exigencies of the beadwork, +however, lends a certain stiffness and ungainliness +to the figures.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">{275}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_VII" id="N_VII"></a>VII<br /> +<br /> +EMBROIDERED<br /> +BOOKS AND<br /> +"BLACK WORK"</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">{278}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image072.jpg"><img src="images/image072.jpg" width="500" height="311" alt=""STUART" BOOK COVER." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">"STUART" BOOK COVER. +<br /> +(British Museum.)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">{279}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>VII<br /> +<br /> +EMBROIDERED BOOKS AND "BLACK WORK"</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Style and symbolism—Specimen in British Museum and +Bodleian Libraries—"Black work"</p></div> + + +<p>Among the many dainty examples of Tudor and +Stuart needlework are to be found the exquisitely +embroidered book-covers which date from +Queen Elizabeth's girlhood until the time of +Charles II. They were always of diminutive size, +and many stitches diversify their covering; oftentimes +they were liberally embroidered with seed-pearls, +and in these instances most frequently this +fashion has been their salvation. A book somehow +always seems to be a more sacred thing than a +picture, and the costly little volumes which remain +to show this dainty handicraft have apparently +always been used either for Church or private +devotional purposes.</p> + +<p>The designs of the book-covers almost always +follow certain styles. These are either heraldic, +scriptural, symbolical, floral, or arabesque.</p> + +<p>The first-named variety usually belonged to royalty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">{280}</a></span> +or one of the many noble houses whose ladies busied +themselves with fair needlework. The shield, containing +the coat of arms of the family, occupied the +centre of the book-cover, being formed in raised gold +and silver guipure or cord, and on the reverse the +worker's initials frequently appear, with a pretty +border in gold and silver, to outline the edges.</p> + +<p>The scriptural book-covers are always worked on +canvas in fine petit point stitches. One in South +Kensington Museum is larger than most of these +volumes, and has on one side Solomon in all his +glory and on the reverse Jacob and his ladder and +King David. These canvas-covered books appear to +have suffered most from the wear and tear of time, +and very few remain.</p> + +<p>The symbolical covers are few, and mostly uninteresting. +They are worked as a rule on silk +and satin in loose satin stitches, which have +suffered much from friction. The sacred monogram +is often the centre of the device. A favourite +design was adorning the back of the books with +portraits of the martyred King Charles I., Queen +Henrietta Maria, and the popular Duke of +Buckingham.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">{281}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image073.jpg" width="500" height="346" alt="POCKET-BOOK OF SATIN, EMBROIDERED WITH COLOURED SILKS AND SILVER-GILT THREAD." title="" /> +<span class="caption">POCKET-BOOK OF SATIN, EMBROIDERED WITH COLOURED SILKS AND SILVER-GILT THREAD. +<br /> +Said to have been the property of Queen Elizabeth. +<br /> +(<i>In Countess Brownlow's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>The stitches used were generally chain-stitch, split-stitch, +petit point, and lace-stitch; and the patterns +were most frequently outlined with a gimp made +of flattened spiral wire, or <i>purl</i>, which was a fine +copper wire covered with coloured silks and cut +in lengths for use. Very often, also, small silver +spangles were employed, either stitched down with a +piece of purl or a seed-pearl. Frequently the covers<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">{283}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282"></a></span> +were of velvet with the designs appliquéd down to it, +and <i>laid</i> or <i>couch</i> work outlined the designs. Sometimes +flat pieces of metal were cut to shape and +stitched down, as in one instance where the corners +of the books were trimmed with the rays of the sun +cut in gold, and stitched over with a gold thread.</p> + +<p>Many of the charming little bags of which mention +has already been made are supposed to have been +worked to hold the Prayer Book and Book of +Psalms, without which no devout lady deemed herself +fully equipped.</p> + +<p>The most famous book is Queen Elizabeth's +Book in the British Museum. The cover is of choice +green velvet, the flat of the back has five roses embroidered +in lace, raised stitches and gold and pearl. +The Royal Arms are on either side of the book in +a lozenge of red silk and pearls. The whole design, +apart from this, is worked in red and white roses +and scrolls of gold and silk. This gorgeous little +cover contains "The Mirrour of Glasse of the +Synneful Soul," written by Elizabeth herself, and +of it she writes that she "translated it out of french +ryme into english prose, joyning the sentences together +as well as the capacities of my symple witte +and small lerning could extende themselves." It is +dedicated "To our most noble and virtuous Queen +Katherine [Katherine Parr] from Assherige, the last +day of the year of our Lord God, 1544."</p> + +<p>In the Bodleian Library there is another treasured +little book, again worked by Queen Elizabeth. It +is only 7 inches by 5 inches, and has the same +design on both sides. In this the ground is what is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">{284}</a></span> +known as "tapestry stitch," worked in thick, pale-blue +silk, and the design is of interlacing gold and +silver threads with a Tudor rose in each corner. +"K. P." is marked on the cover, and shows that this +also was worked for Queen Katherine Parr.</p> + +<p>Yet another little book is in the British Museum. +It contains a prayer composed by Queen Katherine +Parr, and is written on vellum by Queen Elizabeth.</p> + +<p>The cover illustrated is a typical example of the +class of embroidered works of the period. Later the +covers showed less intricate work, and finally developed +into mere velvet covers embroidered with +silver or gold.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">{285}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image074.jpg" width="500" height="376" alt="STUART EMBROIDERED CAP." title="" /> +<span class="caption">STUART EMBROIDERED CAP. (<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + + +<h3>BLACK WORK.</h3> + +<p>A curious phase of Old English embroidery is the +well-known "Black Work," which is said to have been +introduced by Catherine of Aragon into England, and +was also known as "Spanish work." The work itself +was a marvel of neatness, precision, and elegant +design, but the result cannot be said to have been +commensurate with the labour of its production. +Most frequently the design was of scroll-work, worked +with a fine black silk back-stitching or chain-stitch. +Round and round the stitches go, following each +other closely. Bunches of grapes are frequently +worked solidly, and even the popular peascod is +worked in outline stitch, and often the petit point +period lace stitches are copied, and roses and birds +worked separately and after stitched to the design. +There are many examples of this famous "Spanish"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">{287}</a></span> +work in the South Kensington Museum. Quilts, +hangings, coats, caps, jackets, smocks are all to +be seen, some with a couched thread of gold and +silver following the lines of the scrolls. This is +said to be the Spanish stitch referred to in the +old list of stitches, and very likely may be so, as the +style and manner are certainly not English; and we +know that Catherine of Aragon brought wonders of +Spanish stitchery with her, and she herself was devoted +to the use of the needle. The story of how +when called before Cardinal Wolsey and Campeggio, +to answer to King Henry's accusations, she had a +skein of embroidery silk round her neck is well +known.</p> + +<p>The black silk outline stitchery or linen lasted well +through the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. +Very little of it is seen outside the museums, as, not +being strikingly beautiful or attractive, it has been +destroyed.</p> + +<p>Another phase of the same stitchery was working +cotton and linen garments, hangings, and quilts in +a kind of quilted pattern with yellow silk.</p> + +<p>Anything more unlike the quilting of fifty years +ago cannot be imagined. The finest materials +were used, the padding being placed bit by bit in +its place—not in the wholesale fashion of later +years, when a sheet or two of wadding was placed +between the sheets of cotton or linen, and a coarse +back-stitching outlined in great scrawling patterns +held the whole together. The old "quilting" work +was made in tiny panels, illustrating shields and +other heraldic devices, and had a surface as fine as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">{288}</a></span> +carved ivory. When, as in the case of one sample +at South Kensington, the quilt is additionally embroidered +with beautiful fine floss silk flowers, the +effect is very lovely.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">{289}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_VIII" id="N_VIII"></a>VIII<br /> +<br /> +STUART<br /> +PICTURES</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">{291}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>VIII<br /> +<br /> +STUART PICTURES</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"Petit point"—"Stump work"—Royalistic symbols.</p></div> + + +<p>Though these pictures bear the name of Stuart, +many of them are undoubtedly Tudor. The earliest +(if the evidence of costume is of any value) must +have been worked in Elizabeth's time, but as the +authenticated specimens date only from the reign +of James I. they are known as Stuart. The only +pictures worked in the early days of this art were +worked in petit-point, the tiny stitch which imitated +tapestry, and very quaint are the specimens left +to us. The favourite themes were entirely pagan. +Gods and goddesses disported themselves among leafy +trees. Cupid lightly shot his arrows, the woods were +inhabited by an unknown flora and fauna which seem +all its own. The very dogs seem to be a different +species, having more likeness to the china dogs of +the spotted or liver and white variety which the +Staffordshire potters made at the beginning of our +own century. Innumerable little castles were perched +in perfectly inaccessible positions on towering crags,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">{292}</a></span> +and the laws of perspective were generally conspicuous +by their absence. The sun in those days +was a very visible body, and apparently delightful to +work, no Stuart picture being without one; the +rolling clouds oftentimes are confused with the convoluted +body of the caterpillar, little difference being +made in the design. The birds were of very brilliant +plumage, and the world was evidently a very gay +and sportive place when these fair ladies spent their +leisure over this embroidery! These early pictures +seldom show the religious feeling that afterwards +slowly worked its way through the Stuart days +(though, perhaps, disguised under royalistic symbolism), +until in the reign of Queen Anne it became +more or less a fashion, in pictorial needle-craft. +It burst out afresh in the early nineteenth century +and became an absolute obsession of the early +Victorian Berlin-wool workers with most disastrous +results to both design and work.</p> + +<p>Until the end of Charles I.'s reign needlework +pictures must have been scarce, as we find one +enumerated in the inventory of his "Closet of +Rarities." It is possible that the many pictures +which represent Charles I. were worked by loyalist +ladies, <i>after his execution</i> and <i>during the Commonwealth</i>. +In many of these pictures his own hair is +said to have been used, thereby becoming relics of +him who was known as "the Martyred King." On +a very finely worked portrait of Charles I., at South +Kensington Museum, King Charles's hair is worked +amongst the silken threads.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">{293}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 430px;"> +<img src="images/image075.jpg" width="430" height="500" alt="KING CHARLES I., WORKED IN FINE SILK EMBROIDERY." title="" /> +<span class="caption">KING CHARLES I., WORKED IN FINE SILK EMBROIDERY. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>Throughout this time, no matter what the subjects,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">{295}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></a></span> +most of which were notably striking scenes from +Scripture history, such as "Esther and King Ahasuerus," +"Solomon and the Queen of Sheba," "The +Judgment of Solomon" (a very favourite subject), +and other scenes of Old Testament history, all +the kings were Charles I. and all the Queens +Henrietta Maria. One and all wore early Stuart +costumes. Even Pharaoh's daughter wore the handsome +dress of the day, with Point lace falling collar +and real pearls round her neck. It is a fashion to +jeer at this anachronism; but may it not perhaps +be that we take these pictures too literally, and deny +the workers their feelings of passionate devotion to +the lost cause. Doubtless they worked their loyalty +to their beloved monarch into these pretty and +pleasing fancies, just as it is said that the fashion +of "finger-bowls" was introduced later so that the +loyal gentlemen of the day might drink to the King +"<i>over the water</i>." I see no cause to deny intelligence +to these dear dead women, who were capable of +exquisite needlecraft and fine design, and whose +devotion was shown in many instances by giving +up jewels, houses, and lands for the King!</p> + +<p>The fashion of "stump" or stamp work appears +to have been derived from Italy. Italian needlework +of this time abounds with it, and, it must be +admitted, of a superior design, and style to that +which was known here as "stump" work. Until the +eighteenth century English work was more or less +archaic in every branch. Personally, I see no more +absurdity in the queer doll-like figures than in contemporary +wood-carving. It was a period of tenta<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">{296}</a></span>tive +effort, and was, of course, beneath criticism. +English Art has ever been an effort until its one +bright burst of genius in the eighteenth century, +while the continental nations appear to have breathed +artistic perception with life itself.</p> + +<p>The prototype of our stump work pictures, the +Italian raised work, are gracious, graceful figures +perfectly proportioned, and set in lovely elegant +arabesques, with no exaggeration of style or period. +Some specimens of this work must have been brought +from Italy, through France, and the English workers +quickly adopted and adapted them to their own +heavier intelligence. Some of the little figures are +certainly very grotesque. Frequently the tiny little +hands are larger than the heads, but the <i>stitchery</i> +is exquisite.</p> + +<p>No time seems to have been too long to have been +spent in perfecting the petals of a rose, the loose +wing of a butterfly, or to make a realistic curtain in +fine Point lace stitches to hang from the King's +canopy. Some of the King's dresses are said to have +been made of tiny treasured pieces of his garments. +There is no doubt that much devoted sentiment was +worked into these little figures, and these touches of +nature add a pathetic interest to them.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">{297}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image076.jpg"><img src="images/image076.jpg" width="500" height="369" alt="SUPERB EXAMPLE OF STUART PICTURE." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">SUPERB EXAMPLE OF STUART PICTURE. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>In the illustration of "King Solomon receiving the +Queen of Sheba" from the South Kensington Collection +Solomon is obviously King Charles I., while +the Queen of Sheba is equally recognisable as Queen +Henrietta Maria. The picture is perhaps the finest +in the Kensington Collection, the colours being fresh +and the work intact. The little faces are worked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">{299}</a></span> +over a padding of soft frayed silk or wool, the +features being drawn in fine back-stitch. Natural +hair is worked on the King's and Queen's heads, +and the crowns are real gold thread set with pearls. +The canopy is worked <i>solidly</i> in silk and gold +thread, and from it hang loose curtains in old +brocade, worked over and over with gold and silken +thread.</p> + +<p>The King's mantle and that of the Lord Chamberlain +are worked in Point lace stitches, afterwards +applied to the bodies and hanging loosely. The +Queen's dress is brocade, worked over with gold and +silver, while strings of real pearls decorate the necks +and wrists of the ladies, and real white lace of the +Venetian variety trims the neck and sleeves of these +fairy people. The Stuart castle we see perched +up among the trees and touching the sun's beams is +more like an English farmhouse than Whitehall. +Yet either this or Windsor Castle is always supposed +to be represented.</p> + +<p>The British lion and the leopard, again, make the +identity of these little people more certain. The +quaint little trees bear most disproportionate fruits, +the acorn and pears being about the same size, but +all beautifully worked in Point-lace stitches over +wooden moulds. The hound and the hare, the +butterfly and the grub, and the strange birds make +up one of the most typical Stuart pictures.</p> + +<p>The next illustration shows another development +of picture-making. Here the grounding is of white +satin, as in the previous illustration, but the figures +are worked on canvas separately, in fine petit-point<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">{300}</a></span> +stitch, afterwards being cut away and placed on the +white satin ground with a few silk stitches and the +whole outlined with a fine black silk cord. The +subject is "The Finding of Moses," and is as full of +anachronisms as the last, only that here again +Pharaoh's daughter is worked in memory of Queen +Henrietta Maria, and the tiny boy in the corner is +Charles II., and Moses the infant Duke of York. +The four-winged cherubs are the guardian angels who +are watching over the lost fortunes of the Stuart +family, and the rose of England and the lilies of +France which form the border are emblematical +of the royal lineage of their lost King's family. +The hound and hare still chase each other gaily +round the border, and in the picture the hare is +seen emerging, like the Stuarts, from exile and +obscurity.</p> + +<p>Sufficient has perhaps been said to cause those +who possibly may have misunderstood these pictures +to give them another glance, and allow imagination +to carry them back to the times of the exiled Royal +Family and their brave adherents, whose women +allowed not their memories to slumber nor their +labours to flag. These pictures must have been +made during the Commonwealth and the reign of +Charles II. In no case, to my knowledge, has King +Charles II. been depicted in stitchery, nor yet +Catherine of Braganza. James II. is equally ignored, +and with him their mission seemed to have been +accomplished. Possibly the people had had by this +time sufficient of the Stuarts, and the memory of +King Charles the martyr had waxed dim. Certain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">{301}</a></span> +it is that with James II. Stuart needlework pictures +suddenly ceased.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image077.jpg" width="500" height="432" alt="STUART PICTURE, SHOWING THE FINDING OF MOSES." title="" /> +<span class="caption">STUART PICTURE, SHOWING THE FINDING OF MOSES. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + + +<h3><i>Stump work Symbols.</i></h3> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">{303}</a></span>The symbolism of the various animals, birds, insects, +and flowers which are, apparently without +rhyme or reason, placed in one great disarray in +the Stuart pictures is said to have been heraldic +and symbolic. The sunbeam coming from a cloud, +the white falchion, and the chained hart are heraldic +devices belonging to Edward III.</p> + +<p>The buck and the strawberry, which are so often +seen, belong to the Frazer Clan of Scotland, and may +have been worked by ladies who were kith and kin +of this clan.</p> + +<p>The unicorn was the device of James I. and the +siren or mermaid of Lady Frazer, who is said to +have worked her own golden hair in the heart of a +Tudor rose on a book cover for James I.</p> + +<p>The hart was also a device of Richard II. and the +"broom pod" of the Plantagenets. The caterpillar +and butterfly were specially badges of Charles I., +while the oak-tree and acorn were invariably worked +into every picture in memory of Charles II.'s escape +in an oak tree.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">{305}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_IX" id="N_IX"></a>IX<br /> +<br /> +SAMPLERS</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">{307}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>IX<br /> +<br /> +SAMPLERS</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Real art work—Specimens in South Kensington Museum—High +price now obtained.</p></div> + + +<p>A "sampler" is an example or a sample of the +worker's skill and cleverness in design and stitching. +When they first appeared, as far as we know about +the middle of the seventeenth century, they were +merely a collection of embroidery, lace, cut and +drawn work stitches, and had little affinity to the +samplers of a later date, which seemed especially +ordained to show various patterns of cross stitches, +the alphabet, and the numerals.</p> + +<p>The early samplers were real works of art; they +were frequently over a yard long, not more than a +quarter of a yard wide, and were adorned with +as many as thirty different patterns of lace and cut +and drawn work. This extreme narrowness was to +enable the sampler to be rolled on a little ivory +stick, like the Japanese <i>kakemonas</i>.</p> + +<p>The foundation of all the early samplers was a +coarse linen, and to this fact we owe the preservation +of many of them. Those made two hundred years<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">{308}</a></span> +later, on a coarse, loose canvas, even now show signs +of decay, while these ancient ones on linen are as +perfect as when made, only being gently mellowed +by Time to the colour of old ivory.</p> + +<p>The earliest sampler known is dated 1643, and was +worked by Elizabeth Hinde. It is only 6 inches by +6½ inches, and is entirely lacework, and apparently has +been intended for part of a sampler. The worker +perhaps changed her mind and considered rightfully +that she had accomplished her <i>chef d'œuvre</i>, or as +so often explains these unfinished specimens, the +Reaper gathered the flower, and only this dainty +piece of stitching was left to perpetuate the memory +of Elizabeth Hinde.</p> + +<p>The sampler in question is just one row of cut +and drawn work and another of fine Venetian lacework, +worked in "punto in aria." A lady in Court +dress holds a rose to shield herself from Cupid, a +dear little fellow with wings, who is shooting his +dart at her heart. Perhaps poor Elizabeth Hinde +died of it and this is her "swan song."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">{309}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image078.jpg" width="500" height="611" alt="A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY "SAMPLER" (ENGLISH), SHOWING CUT AND +DRAWN WORK." title="" /> +<span class="caption">A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY "SAMPLER" (ENGLISH), SHOWING CUT AND +DRAWN WORK. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p>The earliest samplers appeared to have been +worked only on white cotton or silk. A favourite +design, apart from the lacework samplers, was the +"damask pattern" sampler, a specimen of which may +be noted, commencing with the fifth row, on the +sampler illustrated. Sometimes the sampler was +entirely composed of it, and although ineffective, +remains as a marvel of skill. It was worked entirely +in flat satin stitch and eyelet holes, known as the +"bird's eye" pattern. In the illustration four rows +of cutwork will be noted, followed by five rows of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">{311}</a></span> +drawn threadwork, and above are patterns worked +in floral and geometric designs in coloured silks. +The alphabet and the date 1643 complete this +monument of skill, which may be seen in the South +Kensington Museum.</p> + +<p>The succeeding illustration shows a more ambitious +attempt, and is considered one of the finest specimens +known. It was worked by Elizabeth Mackett, +1696. It is on white linen with ten rows of floral +patterns worked with coloured silks in cross, stem, +and satin stitches, with some portions worked +separately and applied. Five rows of white satin +stitch, two rows of alphabet letters in coloured silks, +and four rows of exquisite punto in aria lace patterns +are followed by the alphabet again in white stitches +and the maker's name and date. The sampler is +in superb preservation, the colours are particularly +rich and well chosen. This sampler is also from the +South Kensington Collection. Often the worker's +name is followed by a verse or rhyme having a +delightfully prosaic tendency. One can imagine +the poor girls, in the early days we are writing of, +writhing under the infliction of having slowly and +painstakingly to work the solemn injunction—</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"When this you see remember me<br /></span> +<span class="i2">And keep me in your mind,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And be not like a weathercock<br /></span> +<span class="i2">That turns at every wind.<br /></span> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">When I am dead and laid in grave,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">And all my bones are rotten,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">By this you may remember me<br /></span> +<span class="i2">When I should be forgotten."<br /></span> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">{312}</a></span></div></div> + +<p>And we can appreciate how little Maggie Tulliver +("The Mill on the Floss ") must have girded at the +philosophy she was compelled to work into her +sampler—</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Look well to what you take in hand,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">For learning is better than house or land;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">When land is gone and money is spent<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Then learning is most excellent."<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>With the eighteenth century the beauty of the +Samplers distinctly declined. They became squarer, +and were bordered with a running pattern, and the +whole canvas became more or less pictorial. Inevitably +the end of this art came. Ugly realistic +bowpots with stumpy trees decorated the picture +in regular order. The alphabet still appeared, and +moral reflection seemed to be the aim of the worker +rather than to make the Sampler show beauty of +stitchery. Quaint little maps of England are often +seen, surrounded with floral borders, but it remained +to the early nineteenth century to show how the +Sampler became reduced to absurdity. One of the +quaintest and most amusing Samplers at South +Kensington is a 12-inch by 8-inch example in woollen +canvas and embroidered with coloured silk. At the +lower end is a soldier, a tiny realistic house, a +dovecot, any number of flowering plants, a stag and +other animals. Above is a band of worked embroidery +enclosing the words, "This is my dear +Father." The remaining spaces are filled in with +angels blowing trumpets, double-headed eagle, peacocks +and other birds, and baskets of fruit. In spite<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">{313}</a></span> +of its absurdity, this little piece is far more pleasant +than the tombstone inscriptions which abound, and +is, after all, delightfully suggestive of home and +affection.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image079.jpg" width="500" height="337" alt="EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER," SHOWING EMBROIDERY IN COLOURED SILK." title="" /> +<span class="caption">EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER," SHOWING EMBROIDERY IN COLOURED SILK. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/image080.jpg" width="500" height="319" alt="EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER," SHOWING BIRD'S-EYE EMBROIDERY AND +CUT AND DRAWN WORK." title="" /> +<span class="caption">EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER," SHOWING BIRD'S-EYE EMBROIDERY AND +CUT AND DRAWN WORK. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">{315}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314"></a></span>Another quaint piece at South Kensington is a +sampler worked by poor Harriet Taylor, <i>aged seven!</i> +At the top are four flying angels, two in clouds +flanking a crown beneath the letters "G. R." In the +middle stands a flower-wreathed arch, with columns +holding vases of flowering plants; above are the +words, "The Temple of Fancy," and within an +enclosed space the following homily:</p> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"Not Land but Learning<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Makes a man complete<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Not Birth but Breeding<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Makes him truly Great<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Not Wealth but Wisdom<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Does adorn the State<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Virtue not Honor<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Makes him Fortunate<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Learning, Breeding, Wisdom<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Get these three<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Then Wealth and Honor<br /></span> +<span class="i2">Will attend on thee."<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<p>Then follows a house called "The Queen's Palace," +standing in an enclosed flower-garden. This masterpiece +of moral philosophy from the hands of a child +of seven years is dated 1813.</p> + +<p>An exaggerated conception of the value of old +Samplers is very widely spread. Only the seventeenth-century +Samplers are really of consequence, and these +fetch fancy prices. In the sale-rooms a long narrow +Sampler of lace stitches and drawn-thread work would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">{316}</a></span> +bring as much as a handsome piece of lace. They +are practically unattainable, and in this case the law +of supply and demand does not obtain. It is beyond +the needlewomen of the present day to imitate these +old Samplers. Life is too short, and demands upon +time are so many and varied, that a lifetime of +work would result in making only one. Therefore, +the fortunate owners of these seventeenth-century +Samplers may cherish their possessions, and those +less lucky possess their souls in patience, and hoard +their golden guineas in the hope of securing one. +Twenty years ago a few pounds would have been +ample to secure a fine specimen, but £30 will now +secure only a short fragment.</p> + +<p>During the last three years I have not seen a +good Sampler at any London Curio or lace shop, +and none appear in the sale-rooms. The eighteenth-century +Samplers are comparatively common, the +map variety especially so, and can be purchased for +a pound or so, but these are not desirable to the +collector.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">{317}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_X" id="N_X"></a>X<br /> +<br /> +THE WILLIAM<br /> +AND MARY<br /> +EMBROIDERIES</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">{320}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318"></a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 334px;"> +<a href="images/full_image081.jpg"><img src="images/image081.jpg" width="334" height="500" alt="JACOBEAN WALL-HANGING WORKED IN COLOURED CREWELS ON LINEN GROUND." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">JACOBEAN WALL-HANGING WORKED IN COLOURED CREWELS ON LINEN GROUND. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">{321}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>X<br /> +<br /> +THE WILLIAM AND MARY EMBROIDERIES</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Queen Mary "a born needlewoman"—The Hampton Court +Embroideries—Revival of petit point—Jacobean +hangings.</p></div> + + +<p>One of the most convincing facts in arguments that +there <i>is</i> a revival in the gentle art of needlecraft is +that it has become the fashion to drape our windows, +cover our furniture, and panel our walls with printed +copies of the Old Jacobean needlework. Many people, +knowing nothing whatever about the history of needlework, +wonder where the designs for the printed linens +which line the windows of Messrs. Liberty, Goodall +and Burnett's colossal frontages in Regent Street +have been found. In time amazement gives way to +admiration for these quaint blues and greens, roses +and pale yellows, worked in great scrolls with exotic +flowers and still more exotic birds, and the funny +little hillocks with delightful little pagoda-like +cottages nestling amongst them, and many and +various little animals which seem to keep perpetual +holiday under the everlasting blooms. The designs<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">{322}</a></span> +are taken bodily from the historical hangings of the +later seventeenth century. After the abdication and +flight of James II. to St. Germains, his daughter +Mary came over with her Dutch husband, William +the Stadtholder—or, rather, William came over and +brought his wife, the daughter of the late king, for +William had no intention of assuming the style and +life of Prince Consort, but came well to the front, +and kept there. It was not "<span class="smcap">Victoria</span> <i>and Albert</i>" +in those days, but <span class="smcap">William</span> and <span class="smcap">Mary</span>, who ruled +England, and ruled it well. William III. must +have been a man of strong personality, and he +managed to quell all the rebellions of his reign, +and during the time he ruled over us the country +settled down to a peaceful state that has remained to +the present time.</p> + +<p>Queen Mary had quite sufficient employment in +settling herself and her household, and generally +managing the domestic matters pertaining to the +new kingdom she had come into. She apparently +had a very free hand in rebuilding Hampton Court, +which she particularly made her home, absolutely +pulling the interior down, and rebuilding and redecorating +it according to her own taste, which +was not that of the Stuart persuasion with its +gorgeous magnificence, but the more homely and +solid Dutch. Very little of the original Hampton +Court <i>interior</i>, built and furnished by Cardinal Wolsey, +exists. Just here and there we find delightfully dark +little dens with the original linen-fold panellings and +ceilings that are a ravishment to look upon; but +mostly the rooms are high, plain-panelled, and with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">{323}</a></span> +the quaint ingle-nook fireplaces, with shelves above, +upon which Mary placed her lovely "blue and white" +porcelain which had been brought to her by the +Dutch merchants who at that time were the great +traders of the sea.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 419px;"> +<img src="images/image082.jpg" width="419" height="500" alt="ENLARGEMENT OF "JACOBEAN" SPRAY." title="" /> +<span class="caption">ENLARGEMENT OF "JACOBEAN" SPRAY. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">{325}</a></span>Queen Mary ought to be regarded as the patron +saint of English needlewomen. She was happiest +when employed furnishing every bed-covering, every +chair and stool, and supplying the hangings for her +favourite home. It is said that she spent her days +over her embroidery frame, knowing full well that +affairs of State were in the capable hands of her +husband.</p> + +<p>There are few relics left of her handiwork outside +Hampton Court. She left no dainty little book-covers, +bags, or boxes, as her ideas were fixed on +larger pieces of embroidery. Had she lived in the +Berlin-wool picture days, she would have filled every +nook and cranny with these atrocities, as many +humbler devotees to the needle have done to our +own knowledge. Needlework can become a <i>passion</i>, +and certainly Queen Mary must have possessed it.</p> + +<p>After the complete collapse of the Stuart stump +pictures, when every vestige of loyalty seems to have +been swept away with the hated James II., the ancient +Petit Point pictures came back into fashion. Very +clever work was put into them, but, alas! their scope +was purely to depict religious scenes of the rigorous +kind. No dainty fairy-like little people now ruled in +pictured story, but actual representations of Bible +history.</p> + +<p>The illustration of "The Baptism of the Ethi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">{326}</a></span>opian +Eunuch by St. Philip" is a fair sample of the +needlework picture of this time. The picture is a +strange mixture of the early Stuart Petit Point, the +Jacobean wall-hanging, and the newly revived religious +spirit. The duck-pond, the swans and the water-plants +might have been copied bodily from James I.'s time. +The paroquet and the flying bird, and the immense +leaves and blossoms, are direct from the wall-hangings, +while the figures only too surely foretell the +coming dark days of needlecraft, when a Scripture +picture and a coarsely worked sampler were part of +every girl's liberal education. The work in this +picture is extremely good, and it is excruciatingly +funny without intending to be so. The pretty little +equipage with its diminutive ponies surely was never +intended to carry either St. Philip or the Eunuch! +The open book, with Hebraic inscription, is very +delightful. It brings to mind the Tables of the Law +rather than the light reading that the charming little +Cinderella coach should carry.</p> + +<p>These pictures are not common, and we scarcely +know whether to be thankful for them or not. +Unlike the early petit point, they were worked in +<i>worsteds</i>, whereas the early pictures were wrought +in silk. The moth has a natural affinity for wool, as +we all know, and his tribe has cleared off many +hundreds of examples. Why so many of the old +Jacobean hangings remain is that they were worked +for <i>use</i>, and not ornament, and even after they ceased +to be fashionable ornaments for sitting and bed +rooms, they were either relegated to the servants' +quarters, or given to dependants, who used them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">{327}</a></span> +constantly, shaking and keeping them in repair, as +the eighteenth-century housewives liked to keep +their homes swept and garnished.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 325px;"> +<a href="images/full_image083.jpg"><img src="images/image083.jpg" width="325" height="500" alt="NEEDLEWORK PICTURE OF QUEEN ANNE PERIOD." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">NEEDLEWORK PICTURE OF QUEEN ANNE PERIOD. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">{329}</a></span>It is strange to see these old Jacobean hangings +(perhaps the drapery of the now tabooed four-post +bedstead), which might some thirty years ago have +been carried off for the asking, sell at Christie's for +£800, as happened in the dispersal of the Massey-Mainwaring +sale last year. Even a panel of no use +except to frame as a picture, say 4 feet by 3 feet, will +fetch £30 and a full-sized bed-cover can only be +bought for over £100. The reason is not far to seek. +The colouring and the drawing of this fine old Crewel-work +are exquisite (even though the design savours +of the grotesque), and Time has dealt very leniently +with the dyes. I endeavoured to match some of +these old worsteds a little time ago, and though +able to find the colours, could not get the tone. +After much tribulation I was advised to hang the +skeins of worsted on the trees in the garden and +<i>forget all about them</i>, and certainly wind and weather +have softened the somewhat garish worsteds to the +soft, <i>fade</i> colours of the old work.</p> + +<p>The same class of embroidery was executed +during the reign of Queen Anne, though she herself +did little of it. Costly silks and brocades and Venetian +laces were the dress of the day, and no little dainty +accessories appear to have been made.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">{331}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_XI" id="N_XI"></a>XI<br /> +<br /> +PICTORIAL<br /> +NEEDLEWORK<br /> +OF THE<br /> +EIGHTEENTH<br /> +CENTURY</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">{334}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332"></a></span></p> +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 407px;"> +<a href="images/full_image084.jpg"><img src="images/image084.jpg" width="407" height="500" alt="A FINE "PAINTED FACE" SILK-EMBROIDERED PICTURE." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">A FINE "PAINTED FACE" SILK-EMBROIDERED PICTURE. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">{335}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XI<br /> +<br /> +PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK OF THE EIGHTEENTH +CENTURY</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>The "painted faces" period—Method of production—Revival +of Scriptural "motifs"—Modern fakes—Black silk and +hair copies of engravings.</p></div> + + +<p>An immense number of pictures must have been +worked during the eighteenth century. Almost, we +might say, no English home is without an example. +Much of the work is intensely bad, and only that +Time has tenderly softened the colours, and the old-time +dresses add an element of quaintness to the +pictures, can they be tolerated. Works of art they +are not, and, indeed, were never intended to occupy +the place their owners now proudly claim for them. +Just here and there a picture of the painted face +type is a masterpiece of stitchery, as in the example +illustrated, where every thread has been worked by an +<i>artiste</i>. Looking at this little gem across a room, the +effect is that of a charming old colour print, so +tenderly are the lines of shading depicted. This +is the only picture of this class that I have seen +for years as an absolutely perfect specimen of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">{336}</a></span> +eighteenth-century silk pictures, though doubtless +many exist.</p> + +<p>The discrepancy which is usually found is that, +although the design and outline is perfect, the faces +and hands exquisitely painted, the needlework part +of the picture has been executed in a foolish, inartistic +manner, and no method of light and shade has +been observed. Some little time ago I published +an article in one of the popular monthly Magazines +illustrating this same picture, and was afterwards +inundated with letters from correspondents from far +and near sending their pictures for valuation and—admiration! +Not one of these pictures was good, +though there were varying degrees of <i>badness</i>. But +in no instance was the painted face crudely drawn or +badly coloured.</p> + +<p>The explanation is that just as the modern needlewoman +goes to a Needlework Depôt and obtains +pieces of embroidery already commenced and the +design of the whole drawn ready for completion, so +these old needle pictures were sold ready for +embroidering, the outline of the trees sketched in +fine sepia lines, the distant landscape already +painted, the faces and hands of the figures charmingly +coloured, in many instances by first-class artists. +When we remember that the eighteenth century was +<i>par excellence</i> the great period of English portrait +painting and colour printing, we can understand that +possibly really fine artists were willing to paint these +exquisite faces on fine silk and satin, just as good +artists of the present day often paint "pot-boilers" +while waiting for fame.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">{337}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<a href="images/full_image085.jpg"><img src="images/image085.jpg" width="500" height="351" alt="EMBROIDERED SILK PICTURE OF "THE LAST SUPPER."" title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">EMBROIDERED SILK PICTURE OF "THE LAST SUPPER." +<br /> +Eighteenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>S.K.M Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">{339}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338"></a></span></p> + +<p>Angelica Kauffmann's style was often copied. Is it +too much to believe that some of these charming faces +may have been from her hands? We know that she +painted furniture and china, therefore why not the +faces of the needlework pictures so nearly akin to +her own work?</p> + +<p>The eighteenth-century costume was particularly +adapted to this pretty work. We cannot imagine +the voluminous robes of Queen Mary or Queen Anne +in needle-stitchery, but the soft, silky lawns of the +Georgian periods, the high-waisted bodices, the +<i>bouffant</i> fichus and the flowing head-dresses, all +were specially easy and graceful to work. Many of +the pretty children Sir Joshua loved to paint were +copied. "Innocence" made a charming picture, +and several of the less rustic Morland pictures were +copied.</p> + +<p>We would imagine that when the beginnings of +the picture were so glorious the needlewoman would +have made some endeavour to work up to it. But, +alas! it was not so. Though often the stitching is +neat and small, not an idea of shading seems to have +entered the worker's mind, and whole spaces, nay, a +complete garment, are often worked solid in one tone +of colour! On the whole there is far more artistic +sense and feeling in the Stump pictures it is the +fashion to deride.</p> + +<p>Not always were dainty pastoral and domestic +scenes worked. Very ghastly creations are still +existent of scriptural subjects. Coarsely worked +in wool, instead of silk, or in a mixture of both. +The painting is still good, but the work and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">{340}</a></span> +subjects are execrable! "Abraham about to sacrifice +Isaac," on the pile of faggots already laid, +and Isaac bound on it, with a very woolly lamb +standing ready as a substitute, was a favourite subject. +"Abraham dismissing Hagar and Ishmael," +with a malignant-looking Sarah in the distance, vies +with the former in popularity. "The Woman of +Samaria," and "The Entombment," are another pair +of unpleasant pictures which we are often called +upon to admire.</p> + +<p>The best of these pictures were worked in fine +floss silk, not quite like the floss silk of to-day, as +it had more twist and body in it, with just a little +fine chenille, and very tiny bits of silver thread to +heighten the effect. The worst were worked in +<i>crewel</i> wools of crude colours. Fortunately, the +moth has a special predilection for these pictures, +and they are slowly being eaten out of existence, +in spite of being cherished as heirlooms and works +of art.</p> + +<p>Another pretty style which we seldom meet with +was some part of the picture covered with the almost +obsolete "ærophane," a kind of chiffon or crape +which was much in request even up to fifty years ago. +A certain part of the draperies was worked on the +silk ground, without any attempt at finish. This +was covered with ærophane, and outlined so as to +attach it to the figure. This again was worked upon +with very happy effects, very fine darning stitches +making the requisite depth of shading. The illustration +shows the use of this, but this cannot be said +to be a very good specimen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">{341}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 381px;"> +<a href="images/full_image086.jpg"><img src="images/image086.jpg" width="381" height="500" alt=""PAINTED FACE" SILK-EMBROIDERED PICTURE." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">"PAINTED FACE" SILK-EMBROIDERED PICTURE. +<br /> +Eighteenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">{343}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342"></a></span></p> + +<p>These painted face, silk-worked pictures are the +only needlework examples the collector <i>need to +beware of</i>, as they are being reproduced by the +score. The method of working in the poorer specimens +is very simple, and it pays the "faker" to sell +for £2 or £3 what takes, perhaps, only half a day +to produce. When a well-executed picture is produced +it is worth money, but so far I have seen none, +except at the Royal School of Needlework, where +the copying of old pictures of the period is exceedingly +well done, and not intended to deceive. +The prices, however, are almost prohibitive, as no +modern needlework picture is worth from £15 to +£30. They are, after all, only copies, and in no +sense of the word works of art.</p> + +<p>During the eighteenth century, also, a fashion set +in of adorning engravings with pieces of cloth, silk, +and tinsel. At best it was a stupid fancy, and was +responsible for the destruction of many fine old mezzotints +and coloured prints. The hands, face, and background +of an engraving were cut out, and pasted on +a sheet of cardboard, pieces of some favourite brocaded +gown, perhaps, were attached to the neck and +shoulders, tiny lace tuckers were inserted, and gorgeous +jewellery was simulated by wretched bits of +tinsel trimming. The realism of the Stuart stump +picture was never so atrocious as this baleful invention, +which was as meretricious as a waxwork +show.</p> + +<p>Not so popular, but far better, were the pictures +worked on white silk with black silk and hair. +There were no artistic aspirations about these—they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">{344}</a></span> +were copies in black and white of the engravings +of the day, just as a pen-and-ink or pencil copy +might be made. Very dainty stitchery was put in +them, the stronger parts of the lines being in fine +black silk, the finer and more distant being worked +in human hair of various shades from black to brown. +Occasionally golden and even white hair is used, and +the effect is often that of a faded engraving. The +silk ground on which these little pictures were +worked is, however, often cracked with age, and many +pretty specimens are ruined. The illustration shows +an example of the type of picture, and depicts +"Charlotte weeping over the Tomb of Werther."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">{345}</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 392px;"> +<a href="images/full_image087.jpg"><img src="images/image087.jpg" width="392" height="500" alt="BLACK SILK AND HAIR PICTURE." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption">BLACK SILK AND HAIR PICTURE. +<br /> +Imitation of Engraving. Eighteenth Century. +<br /> +(<i>Author's Collection.</i>)</span> +</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">{347}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_XII" id="N_XII"></a>XII<br /> +<br /> +NEEDLEWORK<br /> +PICTURES<br /> +OF THE<br /> +NINETEENTH<br /> +CENTURY</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">{349}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XII<br /> +<br /> +NEEDLEWORK PICTURES OF THE NINETEENTH +CENTURY</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Entire decline of needlework as an art—Miss Linwood's +invention!—The Berlin-wool pictures—Lack of efficient +instruction—Waste of magnificent opportunity at South +Kensington Museum.</p></div> + + +<p>It were kindest to ignore 19th century needlework, +but in a book treating of English embroidery something +must be said to bridge over the time when +Needlecraft as an Art was <i>dead</i>. During the earlier +part of the century taste was bad, during the middle +it was beyond criticism, and from then to the time +of the "greenery-yallery" æsthetic revival all and +everything made by woman's fingers ought to be +buried, burnt, or otherwise destroyed. Indeed, if +that drastic process could be carried out from the +time good Queen Adelaide reigned to the early +"eighties" we might not, now and ever, have to +bow our heads in utter abjection.</p> + +<p>The originator and moving spirit of this bad +period was Miss Linwood, who conceived the idea +of copying oil paintings in woolwork. She died<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">{350}</a></span> +in 1845. Would that she had never been born! +When we think of the many years which English +women have spent over those wickedly hideous +Berlin-wool pictures, working their bad drawing and +vilely crude colours into those awful canvases, and +imagining that they were earning undying fame as +notable women for all the succeeding ages, death +was too good for Miss Linwood. The usual boiling +oil would have been a fitter end! Miss Linwood +made a great <i>furore</i> at the time of her invention, +and held an exhibition in the rooms now occupied +by Messrs. Puttick & Simpson, Leicester Square. +Can we not imagine the shade of the great Sir +Joshua Reynolds, whose home and studio these +rooms had been, revisiting the glimpses of the moon, +and while wandering up and down that famous old +staircase forsaking his home for ever after one horrified +glance at Miss Linwood's invention?</p> + +<p>Not only Miss Linwood, but Mrs. Delany and +Miss Knowles made themselves famous for Berlin-wool +pictures. The kindest thing to say is that +the specimens which are supposed to have been +worked by their own hands are considerably +better than those of the half-dozen generations of +their followers. During the middle and succeeding +twenty years of the nineteenth century the notable +housewife of every class amused herself, at the +expense of her mind, by working cross-stitch pictures +with crudely coloured wools (royal blue and +rose-pink, magenta, emerald-green, and deep crimson +were supposed to represent the actual colours +of Nature), on very coarse canvas. Landseer's paint<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">{351}</a></span>ings +were favourite studies, "Bolton Abbey in the +Olden Times" lending itself to a choice range of +violent colours and striking incidents. Nothing was +too sacred for the Berlin-wool worker to lay hands +upon. "The Crucifixion," "The Nativity," "The +Flight into Egypt," "The Holy Family" were not +only supposed to show the skill of the worker, but +also the proper frame of mind the embroideress +possessed. Pleasing little horrors such as the "Head +of the Saviour in His Agony," and that of the +Virgin with all her tortured mother love in her +eyes were considered fit ornaments for drawing-room, +which by the way were also adorned with +wool and cotton crochet antimacassars, waxwork +flowers under glass, and often astonishingly good +specimens of fine Chelsea, Worcester, and Oriental +china.</p> + +<p>Never was the questions of how "having eyes and +yet seeing not" more fully exemplified. The nation +abounded in paintings, prints, fine needlework, and +the product of our greatest period of porcelain +manufacture. Fine examples were at hand everywhere. +Exquisite prints belonging to our only good +period, the eighteenth century, were common; yet +rather than try their skill in copying these, the +needlewomen, who possessed undoubted skill, enthusiasm, +and infinite patience, preferred to copy realistic +paintings of the Landseer school and the highly +coloured prints of the Baxter and Le Blond +period.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately, the craze is by no means buried. +Within the last twelve months I was invited to see<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">{352}</a></span> +the "works" of a wonderful needlewoman in a little +Middlesex village. The local clergyman and doctor +were sufficiently benighted even in these days of +universal culture to admire her work, and her fame +had spread. Room after room was filled with 10 +by 8-feet canvases; every drawer in the house was +crammed with the result of this clever woman's +work—for clever she undoubtedly was. After +exhausting all the known subjects of Landseer +and his school, she had struck out a line for herself, +and had copied the <i>Graphic</i> and <i>Illustrated London +News</i> Supplements of the stirring scenes from the +South African War, such as "The Siege of Ladysmith," +"The Death of the Prince Imperial" in all +its gruesome local colouring, were worked on gigantic +canvases. Her great <i>chef d'œuvre</i> was, however, the +memorial statue of Queen Victoria, copied from the +<i>Graphic</i> Supplement <i>in tones of black, white, and +grey</i>, a most clever piece of work; but—well, she +was happy and more than delighted with my perfectly +honest remark that I had <i>never seen anything +like it</i>!</p> + +<p>Ah! if only this dear woman and the many +others who are wasting their time and eyesight over +fashions which perish could only be reached and +aroused by the influence of the lovely old English +stitchery of our great period! If only the purblind +authorities and custodians of our National collections +could awaken to the infinite possibilities which they +hold, once again "Opus Anglicum" might rule the +world, and the labour of even one woman's life might +be of lasting value. It is useless to refer to the many<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">{353}</a></span> +schools of embroidery there are in different parts +of the country, where fine work is being done on the +best lines. These schools, from the Royal School of +Needlework downwards, are "closed corners," and +no attempt is made to reach the great public. The +Royal School of Needlework is maintained by no +subsidy as it ought to be, but by the many ladies of +position and taste who liberally support it, both +for the instruction and employment of "ladies of +reduced circumstances," and for <i>the disposal of its +work at very high prices</i>. Other schools in town are +simply private adventure institutions, run at a +considerable profit to the principals.</p> + +<p>The superb collection at South Kensington might +as well be buried in the crypt of Westminster +Cathedral for all the value it is to the general +public. There is not the slightest attempt to allow +these unique pieces of "Opus Anglicum" to point +a moral or adorn a tale. The magnificent copes +and vestments, of which there are some score, are +merely tabulated, paragraphed, and photographed, +and there is an end of them. During my constant +visits to these treasures of English Art I have +not once discovered another interested visitor +amongst these beautiful vestments; and the officials, +when interviewed, though perfectly courteous, +apparently resent inquiries; and woe betide the +unfortunate inquirers who <i>might</i> have found the +required information from the tiny little printed card +hidden either too low or too high in the dark +recesses of the corridors, and so spared these <i>savants</i> +the trouble of an interview!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">{354}</a></span></p> + +<p>Why a continuous course of lectures on this and +every kindred Art subject is not made compulsory +at the Victoria and Albert Museum is one of the +burning questions of the hour among the cultured +collectors of the day. The custodians are supposed +to be men of special insight in the branches over +which they preside, yet for all the advantage to the +public they might as well be waxwork dummies. +What we want as a nation is "culture while we +wait," and writ so large that those who run may +read, and until this consummation is attained we +shall ever remain in the Slough of Despond, and Art +for Art's sake will continue dead.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">{355}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_XIII" id="N_XIII"></a>XIII<br /> +<br /> +EMBROIDERY<br /> +IN "COSTUME"</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">{357}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XIII<br /> +<br /> +EMBROIDERY IN "COSTUME"</h2> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Early Greek garments—Biblical references to embroidery—Ecclesiastical +garments—Eighteenth-century dresses, +coats, and waistcoats—Muslin embroideries.</p></div> + + +<p>The subject of Costume has been most admirably +treated in another volume of this series, but a reference +must be made to it as affecting our topic, +English Embroidery, as costume has played no little +part in its history.</p> + +<p>From the earliest ages embroidery has been used +to decorate garments. The ancient Greeks embroidered +the hems of their graceful draperies in +the well-known Greek fret and other designs so +invariably seen on the old Greek vases. The legend +that Minerva herself taught the Greeks the art of +embroidery illustrates how deeply the art was +understood; and the pretty story told by an old +botanist of how the foxglove came by its name and +its curious bell-like flowers is worth repeating. In +the old Greek days, when gods and goddesses were +regarded as having the attributes of humanity in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">{358}</a></span> +addition to those of deities, Juno was one day +amusing herself with making tapestry, and, after the +manner of the people, put a thimble on her finger. +Jupiter, "playing the rogue with her," took her +thimble and threw it away, and down it dropped +to the earth. The goddess was very wroth, and in +order to pacify her Jupiter turned the thimble +into a flower, which now is known as Digitalis, or +finger-stole.</p> + +<p>This little fairy tale can scarcely be taken as +proof conclusive of the existence of either needle +tapestry or thimble use, but its telling may amuse +the reader.</p> + +<p>In all ancient histories we find continuous references +to the embroidered garment worn by its +people. It was well recognised that no material +was sufficiently beautiful not to be further embellished +with rich embroideries. In the Psalms we +find that "Pharaoh's daughter shall be brought to +the king in a raiment of needlework," and that "her +clothing is of wrought gold."</p> + +<p>Phrygia was above all the country most noted for +embroideries of gold, and for many years the name +"Phrygian embroidery" was sufficient to describe +any highly decorated specimen. It is said that the +name of the vestment or trimming, the "orphry" +is derived from the word "Auri-phrygium," meaning +"gold of Phrygian embroidery."</p> + +<p>The Phrygians are credited with having taught +the Egyptians the art, while the Hebrews, while +sojourning in the land of Egypt, learned the art +from their captors, and carried it with them all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">{359}</a></span> +through their journeys to the Promised Land, and +their final settlement in Palestine. The mention of +gold and purple embroideries, both as garments and +hangings, is conspicuous throughout all Bible +history. The Egyptian and Greek arts are in +almost all respects concurrent. The Phœnicians +carried examples of each country's work from one +to another. After the conquest of Greece the +Romans absorbed her art, and developed it in their +own special style. They in turn carried their arts +and crafts to Gaul and Britain, and by degrees +needlecraft permeated the whole of Europe.</p> + +<p>Dealing with the embroidered costumes of our +own country, the ancient records, illuminated +Missals, and other contemporary data show that +very sumptuous were both the ecclesiastical and +lay garments. Heavy gold embroideries were +worked on the hems of skirts and mantles. The +Kings' coronation robes and mantles were beautiful +specimens of handicraft, often after a king's death +being given to the churches for vestments. From +Anglo-Saxon to Norman times extensive use was +made of the work of the needle for clothing, +but after the Conquest till quite late in the Tudor +period little has been found to throw light upon +the use of embroidery for the lay dress of the time. +All woman's taste and energy seem to have been +devoted to make monumental embroideries for +church use.</p> + +<p>It was, indeed, not until the gorgeous period of +Henry VIII. that embroidery, as distinct from +garment-making, appeared; and then everything<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">{360}</a></span> +became an object worthy of decoration. Much +fine stitchery was put into the fine white undergarments +of that time, and the overdresses of +both men and women became stiff with gold +thread and jewels. Much use was made of slashing +and quilting, the point of junction being dotted +with pearls and precious stones. Noble ladies +wore dresses heavily and richly embroidered with +gold, and the train was so weighty that train-bearers +were pressed into service. In the old +paintings the horses belonging to kings and nobles +wear trappings of heavily embroidered gold. Even +the hounds who are frequently represented with +their masters have collars massively decorated with +gold bullion.</p> + +<p>The skirts of the ladies of this time were thickly +encrusted with jewels, folds of silk being crossed +in a kind of lattice-work, each crossing being fixed +with a pearl or jewel, and a similar precious stone +being inserted in the square formed by the trellis. +The long stomachers were one gleaming mass of +jewelled embroidery, the tiny caps or headdresses +being likewise heavily studded with gems.</p> + +<p>During the reign of Charles I. a much daintier +style of dress appeared. Velvet and silken suits +were worn by the men, handsomely but appropriately +trimmed with the fine "punto in aria" +or Reticella laces of Venice; and in this and +the three succeeding reigns dress was of sumptuous +velvets, satins, and heavy silks, unembroidered, +but trimmed, and in Charles II.'s time <i>loaded</i> with +costly laces. It will be noted that whenever lace<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">{361}</a></span> +is in the ascendant, embroidery suffers, as is quite +natural. Lace itself is sufficient adornment for +fine raiment.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 383px;"> +<a href="images/full_image088.jpg"><img src="images/image088.jpg" width="383" height="500" alt="MRS. TICKELL AND HER SISTER, MRS. SHERIDAN, BY GAINSBOROUGH, SHOWING +HOW LACE WAS SUPERSEDED BY FILMY MUSLINS." title="" /></a> +<span class="caption"><span style="font-size: small;"><i>Photo by E. Gray, Bayswater.</i></span> +<br /><br /> +MRS. TICKELL AND HER SISTER, MRS. SHERIDAN, BY GAINSBOROUGH, SHOWING +HOW LACE WAS SUPERSEDED BY FILMY MUSLINS. +<br /> +(<i>Dulwich Gallery.</i>)</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">{363}</a></span>As the use of the fine Venetian and Flemish +and French laces declined, and tuckers and frillings +of Mechlin, Valenciennes, and Point d'Angleterre +appeared, the use of embroidery asserted itself, and +the pretty satins and daintily coloured silks of +William and Mary, Queen Anne, and more specially +the earlier Georges, began to be embroidered in a +specially delicate fashion. Fine floss silk was used in +soft colourings, and whole surfaces were covered with +tiny embroidered sprays of natural-coloured flowers. +Really exquisite stitchery was put into the graceful +honeysuckle, the pansy, carnation, and rose clusters +which decorated the dresses. The bodices, sacques, +and skirts of the early eighteenth-century ladies +were embroidered with real artistic taste and feeling. +Some of the old dresses kept at South Kensington +show the exquisite specimens of this class of +needlework; while the coats and waistcoats of the +sterner sex are not a whit behind the feminine +garments in beauty. The long waistcoats were +most frequently made of cream, pale blue, or white +silk or satin, delightfully embroidered with tiny +sprays of blossoms, and fastened with fine old paste +buttons; while the coat, frequently of brocade, was +heavily embroidered down the front with three or +four inches of solid embroidery of foliage and flowers, +oftentimes mixed with gold and silver threads. The +tiny cravat of Mechlin, cuff ruffles, knee breeches, +silken hose, and buckled shoes, along with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">{364}</a></span> +powdered hair, complete a costume that has never +been equalled, either before or afterwards, in beauty, +grace, and elegance. During the William IV. and +the long Victorian period, with the exception of +a very fine embroidery on muslin, in the earlier +part of it, nothing but fine stitchery for the use of +underwear was made, if we except the hundreds +and thousands of yards of cut and buttonholed +linen which seemed to have been the solace and +delight of our grandmothers when they allowed +themselves to be torn away from their beloved Berlin-wool +work. To sit on a cushion and sew a fine +seam appears to have been the amusement of the +properly constituted women of the early and mid-nineteenth +century.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">{365}</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_XIV" id="N_XIV"></a>XIV<br /> +<br /> +SALE<br /> +PRICES</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">{367}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XIV<br /> +<br /> +SALE PRICES</h2> + + +<p>Ancient embroideries so seldom come into the salerooms +that it is rarely an opportunity occurs for +obtaining market prices, therefore Lady Wolseley's +sale on July 12, 1906, must be accepted as a standard. +Immense prices are asked at the antique +shops, the dealers apparently basing their prices +on this sale by auction and <i>doubling</i> them. I +have visited every shop in the trade in search of +prices for this book before procuring the auctioneer's +catalogue, and was aghast at the terrific +sums asked for oftentimes indifferent specimens +in comparison to what was paid in the auction-room. +During the past year anything from +£15 15s. to £40 has been paid at Christie's for +specimens of varying degrees of perfection of work +and condition. The latter state is even of greater +importance than the first, as no matter how good the +work originally, if discoloured and frayed, prices go +down and down. Nearly all the finest specimens +of the Stump-work period are marred by the +tarnishing of the gold and silver threads. Instead<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">{368}</a></span> +of these being a glory and a great enhancement to +the embroidery, they prove a great disfigurement, +and thereby cause a considerable reduction in value.</p> + +<p>The earlier petit point pictures, having little or +no bullion in their execution (and when cared for +and not exposed to too much sunlight), have kept +their condition very well, and now are quite the +favourite kind for collection. It speaks much for +the quality of the silks used and the dyes of nearly +three hundred years ago that the fugitive greens and +blues and delicate roses in these little works of art, +as in the superb tapestries of the same date, should +be as fine as when made, whereas to-day's colours +are as fleeting as the glories of the rainbow.</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>The following are the principal prices in Lady +Wolseley's sale:</p> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>£</td><td align='right'>s.</td><td align='right'>d.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A small bag, red and gold brocade</td><td align='right'>2</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A small bag or purse</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A fine bead book-cover</td><td align='right'>6</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Same, trimmed with silver lace (Harris)</td><td align='right'>6</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A pair of embroidered shoes (Harris)</td><td align='right'>6</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A small pocket-book, silk embroidery +on silver ground</td><td align='right'>8</td><td align='right'>17</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A pair of Stuart shoes</td><td align='right'>9</td><td align='right'>19</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A stumpwork picture, a most curious globe, showing Europe, Asia, Africa, +and America, 1648 (S. G. Fenton)</td><td align='right'>24</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">{369}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A double book of Psalms, embroidered +binding with Tudor rose</td><td align='right'>23</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A petit point picture, 12½ × 9½</td><td align='right'>11</td><td align='right'>11</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A small picture, partly sketched and partly worked</td><td align='right'>4</td><td align='right'>14</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart stump picture, 18 × 15½</td><td align='right'>18</td><td align='right'>18</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart stump picture, King under +canopy, 17½ × 14</td><td align='right'>14</td><td align='right'>14</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart bullion picture, vase, in +tortoiseshell frame, 23 × 18</td><td align='right'>8</td><td align='right'>8</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Same, with Herodias's daughter and +John the Baptist</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A portrait of Henry, Prince of Wales, +in flat-stitch on rose satin</td><td align='right'>21</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Another on satin, "Bathsheba," +spangled, 17 × 13</td><td align='right'>6</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Another on satin, birds on gold and +silver, 13 × 13 (Harris)</td><td align='right'>13</td><td align='right'>13</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A bead picture, 15 × 11</td><td align='right'>11</td><td align='right'>11</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A stump and bead picture, 12 × 11</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A small book-cover, 14 × 8</td><td align='right'>13</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart stump picture, figures and silver +fountain, tortoiseshell frame, 22 × 16</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A stump picture, lady with coral necklace, +18 × 12</td><td align='right'>23</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A stump picture, lady under arch +with a black swan, 20 × 16 (Stoner)</td><td align='right'>34</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A stump picture, King Charles as Ahasuerus with Haman and Mordecai, +and pearl-embroidered carpet, 23 × 17</td><td align='right'>28</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">{370}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A stump picture, lady under a canopy, +large pearls, 13 × 19, (Stoner)</td><td align='right'>34</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart Petit Point picture, Abraham +and Hagar</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart petit point picture, "Judgment +of Paris," 24 × 17</td><td align='right'>25</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart petit point picture, King +Solomon and Queen of Sheba</td><td align='right'>18</td><td align='right'>18</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A beadwork picture, lady and gentleman, +lion and unicorn, 21 × 17</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An embroidered picture, "Peter denying +Christ," 24 × 17 (S. G. Fenton)</td><td align='right'>9</td><td align='right'>19</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A petit point picture, lake with boats +and figures, 15 × 12 (Harris)</td><td align='right'>14</td><td align='right'>14</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A large stump picture, with horse and rider and figures of four +seasons</td><td align='right'>30</td><td align='right'>10</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A stumpwork picture, four figures, +castle and birds and flowers (S. G. Fenton)</td><td align='right'>33</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A picture sketched on white satin, not +worked</td><td align='right'>4</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart picture on canvas</td><td align='right'>9</td><td align='right'>19</td><td align='right'>6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A fine Stuart jewel-casket, numerous secret drawers, covered in needlework +(S. G. Fenton)</td><td align='right'>47</td><td align='right'>5</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart box, covered with bullion-work +(S. G. Fenton)</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>12</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart box, with embroidery and +pearls (Spero)</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>16</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart box, coloured bullion, 10 × 6</td><td align='right'>9</td><td align='right'>9</td><td align='right'>0<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">{371}</a></span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>An embroidered box, with portrait on +lid (S. G. Fenton)</td><td align='right'>53</td><td align='right'>11</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Stuart mirror, covered with stump embroidery, representing Charles I. +and his Queen (illustrated), (Rosthron)</td><td align='right'>102</td><td align='right'>18</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>Another mirror, with painted and +embroidered figures (Harris)</td><td align='right'>34</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>A Charles I. mirror in old lace and gold frame, with borders in embroidery, +with portrait, castle, and floral decoration</td><td align='right'>40</td><td align='right'>0</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'>3 yds. 13 inches long, 12 inches deep, Cornice in Petit Point, Christie's, +July, 1908 (Harris)</td><td align='right'>204</td><td align='right'>15</td><td align='right'>0</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">{373}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="N_XV" id="N_XV"></a>XV<br /> +<br /> +CONCLUSION</h2><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">{375}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>XV<br /> +<br /> +CONCLUSION</h2> + + +<p>Needlework as a national art is as dead as the +proverbial door-nail; whether or not it ever regains +its position as a craft is a matter of conjecture. +Personally, I incline to the belief that it is absolutely +extinct. The death-knell rang for all time when the +sewing-machine was invented. The machine has +been a very doubtful blessing, as it has allowed even +the art of stitchery in ordinary work to slide into +the limbo of forgotten things. What woman now +knows what it is to "back-stitch" a shirt cuff, for +instance, drawing a thread for guidance, and carefully +going back two or three threads in order to +make a neat, firm line of stitching? The sewing-machine +does all this, and <i>does</i> it <i>well</i>, a clever +machinist turning out more work in a week than +a seamstress in a year. If this were all, it would +be no matter for regret, but with the necessity for +needlework has vanished the desire. The lady +quoted in Green's History is now non-existent. +"She was a pattern of sobriety unto many, very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">{376}</a></span> +seldom seen abroad except at church; when others +recreated themselves at holidays and other times, she +would take her needlework, and say, 'Here is my +recreation.'"</p> + +<p>In spite of the many Schools of Embroidery, with +a few notable exceptions, nothing is done to raise the +standard of embroidery above making miserable little +cushion-covers, table-centres, and suchlike pretty +fripperies for the temporary adornment of the house. +The women of Germany, Holland, Sweden, Italy, on +the contrary, take a great interest in the embroidery +of the bed and table linen and the really artistic embroidery +of their national costumes. Nothing of this +is seen in England. Table linen is bought <i>ready +hemmed</i> at the shop. Dainty tea-cloths and serviettes +are purchased ready embroidered (by machine) and +trimmed with machine-made lace. Even <i>lingerie</i> +of all classes is machine-made and bought by the +dozen, instead of being made by the daughters of +the house.</p> + +<p>The only hope of a revival lies in the various Art +schools in the country where designing for fine embroidery +and lace is encouraged. Unfortunately, +however, equal facilities are offered for designing +of machine-made imitations. The Royal School of +Needlework, not being a Government institution, +offers no encouragement to outsiders. It is in the +hands of a number of ladies, who manage it as +they will; and although very fine work is accomplished, +they trust too much to modern designers +and artists who work out their own pet theories and +hobbies. If only they would put aside all theories<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">{377}</a></span> +and new ideas, and <i>go back</i> to the best periods of +English art both for their designs and execution, even +yet, with the intelligent use of the glorious examples +in the adjoining Museum, much might be done to +revivify this expiring art.</p> + +<p class='center'> +FINIS</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">{379}</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378"></a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380"></a></span></p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">{381}</a></span></p> +<h2 style="text-align: left;"><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>INDEX</h2> + + +<h3>OLD LACE. (<i>For Needlework see page <a href="#Page_384">384</a></i>)</h3> + + +<h3>A</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Adelaide, Queen, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li> +<li>Age of lace, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li> +<li>Alençon lace, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li> +<li>Argentan lace, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li> +<li>Argentella lace, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li> +<li>Anne, Queen, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li> +<li>Appliqué, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li> +<li>Aylesbury, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>B</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Baby lace, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li> +<li>Barri, Madame du, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li> +<li>Beading, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li> +<li>Beads on bobbins, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li> +<li>Bed furnishing, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li> +<li>Bedfordshire lace, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li> +<li>Belgian lace, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li> +<li>Black lace, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li> +<li>Blonde lace, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li> +<li>Bone lace, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li> +<li>Bobbins, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li> +<li>Bolckow, Mrs., <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li> +<li>Brides, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li> +<li>Brussels lace, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li> +<li>Brussels appliqué, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li> +<li>Brussels Vrai Reseau, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li> +<li>Buckinghamshire lace, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li> +<li>Burano, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li> +<li>Buttonhole stitch, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>C</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Caen lace, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li> +<li>Carrick-ma-cross, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li> +<li>Catherine de Medici, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li> +<li>Chantilly lace, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li> +<li>Charles I., <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li> +<li>Charles II., <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li> +<li>Charlotte, Queen, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li> +<li>Christie's sale-room, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li> +<li>Colbert, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li> +<li>Collar lace, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li> +<li>Collar, Medici, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li> +<li>Commonwealth, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li> +<li>Cordonnet, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li> +<li>Convents, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li> +<li>Coptic embroideries, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li> +<li>Couronnes, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li> +<li>Cravat, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li> +<li>Creevy Papers, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li> +<li>Cromwell, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li> +<li>Crotchet, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li> +<li>Cut worke, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li> +<li>Cuthbert, St., <a href="#Page_22">22</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382"></a>{382}</span></li> +</ul> + +<h3>D</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Danish lace, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li> +<li>Darned netting, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li> +<li>Debenham & Storr's sale-room, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li> +<li>Dentelé, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li> +<li>Devonshire lace, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li> +<li>Dorsetshire lace, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li> +<li>Drawn work, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li> +<li>Duchesse lace, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li> +<li>Durham Cathedral, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>E</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Ecclesiastical lace, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li> +<li>Edgings, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li> +<li>Edward IV., <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li> +<li>Egyptian netting, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li> +<li>Elizabeth, Queen of England, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li> +<li>Embroidered net, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li> +<li>English laces, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li> +<li>Empress Eugénie, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>F</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Falling collar, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li> +<li>Fausse Valenciennes, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li> +<li>Fillings, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li> +<li>"Figure" motifs, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li> +<li>Flanders lace, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li> +<li>Flat point (point plat), <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Flax thread, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li> +<li>Florence, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li> +<li>Flemish point, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li> +<li>Fond, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li> +<li>Fontange, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li> +<li>Fowler, Mrs., of Honiton, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li> +<li>France, point de, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li> +<li>French Revolution, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>G</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Genoese lace, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li> +<li>George I., <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li> +<li>George II., <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li> +<li>George III., <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li> +<li>George IV., <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li> +<li>German laces, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li> +<li>Ghent laces, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li> +<li>Gingles, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li> +<li>Gold and silver laces, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li> +<li>Greek laces, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li> +<li>Groppo, Punto a, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li> +<li>Gros, Point de Venise, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li> +<li>Grounds, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li> +<li>Guipure, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li> +<li>Gold lace, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>H</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Hamilton lace, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li> +<li>"Hayward's," 114</li> +<li>Henry VII., <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li> +<li>Henry VIII., <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li> +<li>High Wycombe, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li> +<li>History of lace, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li> +<li>Honiton, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li> +<li>Honiton appliqué, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li> +<li>Huguenots, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>I</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Identification of lace, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li> +<li>Irish lace, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li> +<li>Italian lace, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>J</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>James I., <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li> +<li>James II., <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li> +<li>Jours, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>K</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Kenmare, Lady, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li> +<li>King of Rome, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>L</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>"Lacis," <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li> +<li>Lappets, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li> +<li>Lawn, <a href="#Page_93">93</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383"></a>{383}</span></li> +<li>Lewis Hill, Mrs., <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li> +<li>Lille, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li> +<li>Limerick, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li> +<li>L'Onray, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li> +<li>Louis XIV., <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li> +<li>Louis XV., <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li> +<li>Lyme Regis, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>M</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Machine-made ground, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li> +<li>Macramé, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li> +<li>Malines, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li> +<li>Maltese, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li> +<li>Mantillas, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li> +<li>Marie Antoinette, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li> +<li>Massey-Mainwaring, Mrs., <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li> +<li>Marie de Medici, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li> +<li>Marie Stuart, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li> +<li>Mary, Queen, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li> +<li>Mary II., <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li> +<li>Mechlin, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li> +<li>Medici collar, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li> +<li>Mezzo Punto, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li> +<li>Milanese lace, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li> +<li>Mixed lace, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li> +<li>Modern point lace, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li> +<li>Montespan, Madame de, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>N</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Napoleon I., <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li> +<li>National Library, S.K.M., <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Needlepoint lace, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li> +<li>Network, ancient, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li> +<li>Newport Pagnell, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li> +<li>Normandy lace, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li> +<li>Norway, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li> +<li>Northamptonshire lace, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li> +<li>Nuns, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>O</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Œil de perdrix, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li> +<li>Origin of lace, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>P</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Palliser, Mrs. Bury, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li> +<li>Parchment, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li> +<li>Parasole, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Pearls, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li> +<li>Peter the Great, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li> +<li>Picots, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li> +<li>Pillow lace, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li> +<li>Point lace, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li> +<li>Point à réseau, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li> +<li>Point d'Aiguille (Brussels), <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li> +<li>Point d'Alençon, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li> +<li>Point d'Angleterre, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li> +<li>Point appliqué, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li> +<li>Point de France, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li> +<li>Point de Gaze, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li> +<li>Point de Venise, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li> +<li>Point de Venise Gros, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li> +<li>Point de Neige, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Point plat, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Punto in aria, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li> +<li>Punto a groppo, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li> +<li>Punto tagliato a foliami, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>Q</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Quillings, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li> +<li>Quentin Matys, <a href="#Page_103">103</a></li> +<li>Queen Anne, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li> +<li>Queen Mary II., <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li> +<li>Queen Charlotte, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li> +<li>Queen of Laces, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li> +<li>Queen Victoria, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>R</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Raised stars, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li> +<li>Rose point, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Renaissance, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li> +<li>Reseau, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li> +<li>Reticella, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li> +<li>Revolution, French, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li> +<li>Rococo, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li> +<li>Royal trousseaux, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384"></a>{384}</span></li> +<li>Ruffles, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li> +<li>Russian lace, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>S</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>St. Cuthbert, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li> +<li>Sale prices, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li> +<li>Samplers, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li> +<li>Saxony lace, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li> +<li>Scotch lace, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li> +<li>Silk lace, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li> +<li>Smocks, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li> +<li>Spanish point, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li> +<li>Steinkirk, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li> +<li>Sumptuary law, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li> +<li>South Kensington Museum, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>T</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Tambour lace, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li> +<li>Tape lace, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li> +<li>Tatting, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li> +<li>Thread, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li> +<li>Toilé, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li> +<li>Trolly lace, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>V</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Valenciennes lace, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a></li> +<li>Vandyke, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li> +<li>Venice, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li> +<li>Vicellio, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Venetian lace, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Victoria, Queen, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li> +<li>Vinciolo, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li> +<li>Vraie Valenciennes, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>W</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Westminster effigies, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li> +<li>William and Mary, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li> +<li>"Wynyards," <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li> +<li>William III., <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li> +<li>Wiltshire lace, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li> +<li>Willis's Rooms, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>Y</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Youghal laces, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li> +</ul> + + +<h3><a name="NEEDLEWORK_INDEX" id="NEEDLEWORK_INDEX"></a>NEEDLEWORK</h3> + + +<h3>A</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Athelstan, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li> +<li>Alb, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li> +<li>Aldhelm, Bishop of Sherborne, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li> +<li>Aelfled, Queen of Edward the Elder, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li> +<li>Angelica Kauffmann, <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li> +<li>Art, the pioneer, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li> +<li>Ascagni cope, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li> +<li>Ascoli cope, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>B</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Bags, Stuart, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li> +<li>Bayeux tapestry, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li> +<li>Beads, Venetian, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li> +<li>Berlin wool pictures, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li> +<li>Bishop Fridhestan, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li> +<li>Black work, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li> +<li>Bologna cope, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li> +<li>Book-covers, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li> +<li>Bridgettine nuns, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>C</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Catworth cushions, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li> +<li>Catherine of Aragon, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li> +<li>Caskets, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li> +<li>Chain stitch, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li> +<li>Charles I., <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li> +<li>Charles II., <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li> +<li>Chasubles, <a href="#Page_241">241</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385"></a>{385}</span></li> +<li>Christie's sale-rooms, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li> +<li>City palls, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li> +<li>Church vestments, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li> +<li>Coventry, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li> +<li>Copes, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li> +<li>Crewel work, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>D</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Daroca cope at Madrid, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li> +<li>Dr. Rock, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>E</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Earl of Shrewsbury, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li> +<li>Editha, Queen of Edward the Confessor, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li> +<li>Egyptian embroidery, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li> +<li>Emma, Queen of Ethelred the Unready, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li> +<li>Elizabeth's wardrobe, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li> +<li>Elizabeth's Book at British Museum, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li> +<li>Elizabeth's Book at the Bodleian Library, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li> +<li>Elizabeth Hinde's Sampler, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li> +<li>Elizabeth Mackett's Sampler, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>F</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Field of the Cloth of Gold, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>G</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Georgian costumes, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li> +<li>Georgian pictures, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li> +<li>Gimps, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li> +<li>Gloves, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li> +<li>Greek garments, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>H</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Hampton Court, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li> +<li>Hair and silk pictures, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li> +<li>Henrietta Maria, Queen, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li> +<li>Henry VIII., <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li> +<li>Höchon collection, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>I</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Isleworth, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li> +<li>Italian raised work, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>J</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>James I., <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li> +<li>Jacobean hangings, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li> +<li>"Jesse" Cope, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li> +<li>John Taylor's Needlework Rhyme, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>L</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Lady Jane Grey, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li> +<li>"Laid," or couch work, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li> +<li>Linwood, Miss, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>M</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Maniple, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li> +<li>Mary Queen of Scots, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li> +<li>Mary II. embroidery, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li> +<li>Minerva, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li> +<li>Mirror frames, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>N</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Needlework pictures, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li> +<li>Neolithic remains, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li> +<li>"Nevil" altar-frontal, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>O</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Opus Anglicum, or Anglicanum, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>P</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>"Painted face" picture, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li> +<li>Petit point, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li> +<li>Phoenicians, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li> +<li>Phrygian embroidery, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li> +<li>Pierpont Morgan, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li> +<li>Pocket books, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li> +<li>Pope Innocent III., <a href="#Page_223">223</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386"></a>{386}</span></li> +</ul> + +<h3>Q</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Quilting, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>R</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Reformation, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li> +<li>Roman Invasion, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li> +<li>Royal School of Needlework, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li> +<li>Rock's "Church of Our Fathers," <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>S</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Samplers, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li> +<li>St. Augustine, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li> +<li>St. Benedict, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li> +<li>St. Cuthbert, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li> +<li>St. Dunstan, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li> +<li>Steeple Aston altar-frontal, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li> +<li>Stoles, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li> +<li>Stump work, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li> +<li>Stump work symbols, <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li> +<li>"Syon" cope, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li> +<li>Subjects of needle pictures, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>T</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Tambour stitch, <a href="#Page_227">227</a></li> +<li>Tudor embroideries, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li> +<li>Trays, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li> +</ul> + +<h3>W</h3> +<ul class="IX"> +<li>Wonderful needlewoman, A, <a href="#Page_351">351</a></li> +<li>Wolsey, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></li> +<li>Wolseley's, Lady, collection, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a></li> +<li>Worcester fragments, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li> +</ul> + + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p class='center'> +<i>Printed in Great Britain by</i><br /> +UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON<br /> +</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p>Transcriber's Note:</p> + +<p>Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected.</p> + +<p>Inconsistent hyphenation in the original has been preserved, e.g. +cutwork, cut-work; hand-made, handmade; lace-workers, laceworkers; +may-flower, mayflower; needle-craft, needlecraft; needle-point, +needlepoint; salerooms, sale-rooms; semi-circular, semicircular.</p> + +<p>Inconsistent use of accents has been preserved, e.g. applique, appliqué; +réseau, reseau; toile, toilé.</p> + +<p>In the Index, Pierpoint was corrected to Pierpont to match the body of +the text.</p> + +<p>The main body of the text refers to the "Hockon collection", which is +referred to in the index as the "Höchon collection". It is unclear which +of these is correct so they have been preserved as they appear in the +original.</p> + +<p>Page 25: 'survival of the fitting' changed to 'survival of the fittest'.</p> + +<p>Page 38: 'accompanying diagrams' changed to 'accompanying diagram'.</p> + +<p>Page 42: 'little loop' changed to 'little loops'.</p> + +<p>Page 127: '"Duchesse point" of "Bruges,"' changed to '"Duchesse point" or "Bruges,"'.</p> + +<p>Page 192: 'of same period' changed to 'of the same period'.</p> + +<p>Page 196: 'other two' changed to 'two other'.</p> + +<p>Page 300: 'and rose of England' changed to 'and the rose of England'.</p> + +<p>Page 303: 'and butterfly was' changed to 'and butterfly were'.</p> + +<p>Page 315: 'a long narrow Samplers' changed to 'a long narrow Sampler'.</p> + +<p>Page 383: 'Punto à groppo' changed to 'Punto a groppo'.</p> + + +<p> </p> +<p> </p> +<hr class="full" /> +<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK***</p> +<p>******* This file should be named 26120-h.txt or 26120-h.zip *******</p> +<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br /> +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/1/2/26120">http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/1/2/26120</a></p> +<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed.</p> + +<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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/dev/null +++ b/26120.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6125 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Chats on Old Lace and Needlework, by Emily +Leigh Lowes + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Chats on Old Lace and Needlework + + +Author: Emily Leigh Lowes + + + +Release Date: July 24, 2008 [eBook #26120] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK*** + + +E-text prepared by Susan Skinner and the Project Gutenberg Online +Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 26120-h.htm or 26120-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/1/2/26120/26120-h/26120-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/1/2/26120/26120-h.zip) + + + + + +CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK + +by + +MRS. LOWES + + * * * * * + +BOOKS FOR COLLECTORS + + +_With Frontispieces and many Illustrations Large Crown 8vo, cloth._ + +CHATS ON ENGLISH CHINA. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON OLD FURNITURE. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON OLD PRINTS. + (How to collect and value Old Engravings.) + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON COSTUME. + By G. Woolliscroft Rhead. + +CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK. + By E. L. Lowes. + +CHATS ON ORIENTAL CHINA. + By J. F. Blacker. + +CHATS ON OLD MINIATURES. + By J. J. Foster, F.S.A. + +CHATS ON ENGLISH EARTHENWARE. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON AUTOGRAPHS. + By A. M. Broadley. + +CHATS ON PEWTER. + By H. J. L. J. Masse, M.A. + +CHATS ON POSTAGE STAMPS. + By Fred. J. Melville. + +CHATS ON OLD JEWELLERY AND TRINKETS. + By MacIver Percival. + +CHATS ON COTTAGE AND FARMHOUSE FURNITURE. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON OLD COINS. + By Fred. W. Burgess + +CHATS ON OLD COPPER AND BRASS. + By Fred. W. Burgess. + +CHATS ON HOUSEHOLD CURIOS. + By Fred. W. Burgess. + +CHATS ON OLD SILVER. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON JAPANESE PRINTS. + By Arthur Davison Ficke. + +CHATS ON MILITARY CURIOS. + By Stanley C. Johnson. + +CHATS ON OLD CLOCKS AND WATCHES. + By Arthur Hayden. + +CHATS ON ROYAL COPENHAGEN PORCELAIN. + By Arthur Hayden. + +LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN, LTD. +NEW YORK: F. A. STOKES COMPANY + + * * * * * + +[Illustration: Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke.] + + +MARY SIDNEY, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE. + +Born about 1555. Died 1621. +Buried at Salisbury Cathedral. +Painted probably by MARC GHEERAEDTS. + + "Underneath this sable hearse + Lies the subject of all verse. + Sidney's sister, Pembroke's mother. + Death! ere thou hast slain another + Fair and learn'd and good as she, + Time shall throw a dart at thee!" + + +CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK + +by + +MRS. LOWES + +With 76 Illustrations + + + + + + + +London +T. Fisher Unwin, Ltd. +Adelphi Terrace + +First Impression 1908 +Second Impression 1912 +Third Impression 1919 + +[All rights reserved.] + + + + +PREFACE + + +This little book has been compiled to emphasise and accentuate the +distinct awakening of English women and Needlecraft Artists to the +beauty of the ancient laces and embroideries which we own in the +magnificent historic collections in our great public Museums. + +We are fortunate in possessing in the Victoria and Albert Museum +monumental specimens of both lace and needlework. Among the sumptuous +lace collection there are most perfect specimens of the art of +lace-making, and priceless pieces of historic embroidery made when +England was first and foremost in the world in the production of +Ecclesiastical embroidery. + +The lace collection particularly, without compare, is illustrative of +all that is best in this delightful art, being specially rich in +magnificent pieces that can never be again obtained. These have mostly +been given, or left as legacies, to the Museum by collectors and +enthusiasts who have made this fascinating hobby the quest of their +lives. In addition to the collection formed by the generosity of the +donors, the authorities have exercised a very catholic judgment in +selecting the choicest and most illustrative examples of the +lace-maker's craft. + +In the section devoted to embroideries, more particularly English (as it +is with our own country's needlework I propose to deal), nothing more +glorious in the Nation's art records can be found than the masterpieces +of embroidery worked by the great ladies, the abbesses and nuns of the +Mediaeval period. In almost every other branch of art England has been +equalled, if not excelled, by Continental craftsmen; but in this one +instance, up to the Reformation, English work was sought after far and +wide, and as _opus Anglicum_ formed part of church furnishing and +priestly vestments in every great cathedral in Italy, Spain, and France. + +It cannot be too soon realised that, as with old furniture, porcelain, +and silver, much of the finest embroideries of England, and a vast +quantity of the ancient laces of Italy, France, and Belgium are being +slowly but surely carried off to the New World. American dollars are +doing much to rob not only the Old Country of the fairest flowers of her +garden, but the Continent of their finest and best examples of the +genius of the past. The Vanderbilts and the Astors, among others, +possess immense fortunes in lace, whilst that omnivorous collector Mr. +J. Pierpont Morgan gives fabulous sums for any fine old relic of +embroidery. Many pieces of both classes of needlecraft have found a +permanent home in the Metropolitan Museum of New York, and are lost for +ever to the English student. + +It is, therefore, a pleasant duty to add my little quota of information +to the study of these fascinating and exquisite branches of fine art +which so specially appeal to all women by their dainty grace and +delightful handicraft. I hope I may arouse some little enthusiasm in my +countrywomen in the study of the past glories of both subjects, and in +the possibility of once again becoming first and foremost in the latter +branch. + +I beg to acknowledge the pleasure and help I have received from the +perusal of the late Mrs. Bury Palliser's exhaustive "History of Lace," +and Lady Alford's "History of Needlework," and Dr. Rock's invaluable +books on "Ecclesiastical Embroidery." + +EMILY LEIGH LOWES. + +HILLCREST, +BRIXTON HILL, +S.W. + + + + +BIBLIOGRAPHY + + +LACE. + + The History of Lace. 1 vol. Mrs. Bury Palliser. Sampson, + Marston & Low. 1865. L2 2s. + + Dentelles and Guipures. 1 vol. E. Lefebure. Grevil. 1888. + + Ancient Needlepoint and Pillow Lace. Alan Sumnerly Cole. + London. 1873. + + The Queen Lace Book. London. 1874. + + Of Lace. Alan Sumnerly Cole. 1893. + + Point and Pillow Lace. A. M. Sharp. George Newnes & Co. 7s. 6d. + + Venice and Burano. Ancient and Modern Lace. M. Jesuram. Venice. + 1883. + + The History of Handmade Lace. Mrs. Jackson. Upcott Gill & Son. + 1900. 18s. + + Seven Centuries of Lace. Mrs. Hungerford-Pollen. 1st vol. + issued 1908. + + +NEEDLEWORK. + + Textile Fabrics. Dr. Daniel Rock. South Kensington Handbook + Series. 1876. 1s. + + Needlework as Art. Lady Marion Alford. London. 1886. L4 4s. + + English Embroidery. A.F. Kendrick. George Newnes & Co. 7s. 6d. + + Art in Needlework. Day & Buckle. Batsford. 7s. 6d. + + + + +CONTENTS + + + PAGE + +PREFACE 7 + +BIBLIOGRAPHY 10 + + +OLD LACE + +CHAPTER + + I. A BRIEF HISTORY OF LACE 21 + + II. THE ART OF LACE-MAKING 33 + + III. THE LACES OF ITALY 45 + + IV. THE LACES OF GENOA AND MILAN 57 + + V. THE LACES OF FRANCE: NEEDLEPOINT 69 + + VI. THE LACES OF FRANCE: PILLOW 85 + + VII. THE LACES OF FLANDERS 99 + +VIII. MODERN BRUSSELS AND MECHLIN 119 + + IX. OTHER CONTINENTAL LACES 131 + + X. A SHORT HISTORY OF LACE IN ENGLAND 139 + + XI. ENGLISH LACES 155 + + XII. SCOTCH AND IRISH LACE 169 + +XIII. HOW TO IDENTIFY LACE 179 + + XIV. SALE PRICES 199 + + +NEEDLEWORK + +CHAPTER PAGE + + I. OLD ENGLISH EMBROIDERY 205 + + II. THE GREAT PERIOD 217 + + III. ECCLESIASTICAL EMBROIDERIES AND VESTMENTS 229 + + IV. TUDOR EMBROIDERIES 245 + + V. EARLY NEEDLEWORK PICTURES AND ACCESSORIES 253 + + VI. STUART CASKETS AND MIRROR 267 + + VII. EMBROIDERED BOOKS AND "BLACK WORK" 275 + +VIII. STUART PICTURES 289 + + IX. SAMPLERS 305 + + X. THE WILLIAM AND MARY EMBROIDERIES 317 + + XI. PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 331 + + XII. NEEDLEWORK PICTURES OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY 347 + +XIII. EMBROIDERY IN COSTUME 355 + + XIV. SALE PRICES 365 + + XV. CONCLUSION 373 + + +INDEX--OLD LACE 381 + + NEEDLEWORK 384 + + + + +LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS + + +MARY SIDNEY, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE _Frontispiece_ + + +OLD LACE PAGE + +EGYPTIAN CUT AND DRAWN WORK 20 + +OLD ITALIAN "CUTWORKE" 20 + +EARLY ENGLISH SAMPLERS 23 + +ORIGINAL PATTERNS BY VINCIOLA 27 + +ORIGINAL DESIGNS OF RETICELLA EDGINGS BY VINCIOLA 31 + +CHART OF NEEDLEPOINT RESEAUX 36 + +CHART OF PILLOW RESEAUX 39 + +VENETIAN ROSE POINT 43 + +VENETIAN ROSE POINT COLLAR 48 + +EXAMPLES OF FLAT VENETIAN POINT 51 + +MARIE DE MEDICIS WEARING VENETIAN POINT COLLAR 52 + +EXAMPLE OF GROS POINT DE VENICE 55 + +LOUIS XIII. WEARING GENOESE COLLAR LACE 60 + +GENOESE COLLAR LACE 63 + +MILANESE LACE 67 + +OLD ITALIAN AND FRENCH LACES AND CUT AND DRAWN WORK 72 + +"POINT DE FRANCE" 75 + +POINT D'ALENCON 76 + +"POINT DE FRANCE" AND D'ARGENTELLA 79 + +POINT D'ARGENTAN AND POINT D'ARGENTELLA 83 + +VALENCIENNES 88 + +"LILLE" 91 + +EMPRESS EUGENIE WEARING BLONDE LACE 95 + +POINT D'ANGLETERRE 102 + +POINT D'ANGLETERRE LAPPET 105 + +BRUSSELS LACE 109 + +BRUSSELS LAPPET 113 + +COMTESSE D'ARTOIS WEARING BRUSSELS LACE 117 + +MARIE ANTOINETTE 122 + +MECHLIN LAPPET 125 + +MARIE ANTOINETTE WEARING MECHLIN LACE 129 + +"DUCHESSE" LACE 135 + +QUEEN ELIZABETH WEARING VENETIAN POINT RUFF AND CUFFS 141 + +EDMUND SPENSER: COLLAR TRIMMED WITH RETICELLA 145 + +RETICELLA FALLING COLLAR 149 + +COLLAR OF GROS POINT 153 + +OLD BUCKINGHAM AND EARLY DEVONSHIRE LACES 159 + +OLD HONITON LACE 163 + +MODERN HONITON LACE 167 + +LIMERICK "FILLINGS" 173 + +CARRICK-MA-CROSS LACE 177 + +RETICELLA WITH GENOA BORDERS 182 + +POINT D'ANGLETERRE 185 + +ITALIAN ECCLESIASTICAL LACE 189 + +BRUSSELS LAPPET 193 + +"POINT DE GAZE" 197 + + +NEEDLEWORK + +EGYPTIAN EMBROIDERY 208 + +BAYEUX TAPESTRY 211 + +KING HAROLD FROM BAYEUX TAPESTRY 215 + +FRAGMENT FROM THE "JESSE" COPE 221 + +THE "SYON" COPE 225 + +THE STEEPLE ASTON ALTAR FRONTAL 232 + +THE "NEVIL" ALTAR FRONTAL 235 + +DIAGRAM SHOWING USE OF VESTMENTS 239 + +SET OF ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS 243 + +EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE 256 + +EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE 259 + +STUART GLOVE 263 + +STUART MIRROR FRAME 271 + +STUART BOOK COVER 278 + +QUEEN ELIZABETH'S POCKET-BOOK 281 + +"BLACK WORK" CAP 285 + +EMBROIDERY PORTRAIT OF KING CHARLES I. 293 + +STUMP-WORK PICTURE 297 + +"PETIT POINT" PICTURE WORKED ON SATIN 301 + +A SEVENTEENTH CENTURY "SAMPLER" 309 + +EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER" 313 + +JACOBEAN HANGINGS 319 + +ENLARGEMENT OF SPRAY FROM HANGINGS 323 + +QUEEN ANNE PICTURE 327 + +EARLY GEORGIAN PICTURE 334 + +"THE LAST SUPPER" 337 + +EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SILK EMBROIDERED PICTURE 341 + +BLACK SILK AND HAIR PICTURE 345 + +A "GAINSBOROUGH" PICTURE 361 + + + + +I + +A BRIEF HISTORY OF LACE + + +[Illustration: EGYPTIAN CUT AND DRAWN WORK. + +Found in a tomb in Thebes.] + +[Illustration: OLD ITALIAN "CUTWORKE." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +CHATS ON OLD LACE + + + + +I + +A BRIEF HISTORY OF LACE + + Early vestiges in Egypt--Lace found in St. Cuthbert's Tomb (685 + A.D.)--Drawn Thread and Cutworks--Venetian Lace--Flanders + Lace--French Laces--English Lace. + + +In every other art or craft we can search the history of ages and find +some vestiges or beginnings among the earlier civilisations. Possibly +owing to the exquisite fragility of Lace, there is a complete absence of +data earlier than that of Egypt. The astonishing perfection in art +handicrafts of all descriptions which we find in China many hundreds of +years before the Christian era shows no vestiges of a manufacture of +lace; but, in the tombs of ancient Egypt, garments have been discovered +with the edges frayed and twisted into what we may call a primitive +lace, and in some of the Coptic embroideries threads have been drawn out +at intervals and replaced with those of coloured wools, making an +uncouth but striking design. Netting must have been understood, as many +of the mummies found at Thebes and elsewhere are discovered wearing a +net to hold or bind the hair; and also, a fine network, interspersed +with beads, is often discovered laid over the breast, sometimes having +delightful little blue porcelain deities strung amongst their meshes. + +These early vestiges, however, are in no way representative of the later +exquisite fabrics which we now know and recognise as Lace. Far nearer to +them, as an art, are the early gold and silver laces of simple design +found amongst the tombs of Mycenae and Etruria, and those of a later +date--_i.e._, the laces of gold used to decorate the vestments of the +clergy, and the simple but sumptuous gowns of the Middle Ages. Along +with the stole and maniple of St. Cuthbert, which are now at Durham +Cathedral, was found a piece of detached gold lace, which must have +formed a separate trimming. St. Cuthbert died in 685 A.D., and was +buried at Lindisfarne, his body being afterwards transferred to Durham +to save it from the desecration of the Danes who were ravaging the land. +Over the body was a cloth, or sheet, which was worked in cutworks and +fringes, showing that even at so early a date initial efforts at +lace-making had been attempted. + +[Illustration: EARLY ENGLISH SAMPLERS, SHOWING CUT AND DRAWN WORK. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +As far as we can gather, the earliest endeavour at lace-making +originated with the drawing of threads in linen fabrics, then dividing +the existing threads into strands, and working over them, in various +fanciful designs, either with a buttonhole stitch or simply a wrapping +stitch. Exactly this method is used at the present day, and is known +as hem-stitching and fine-drawing. A later development suggested, +apparently, cutting away of some of the threads, their place being +supplied with others placed angularly or in circles. Many delightful +examples of the work are to be seen in our Old English samplers of the +sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and even so recently as thirty +years ago specimens of this primitive and early lace-making were to be +seen in the quaint "smock-frock" of the English farm labourer, a garment +which, though discarded by the wearer in favour of the shoddy products +of the Wakefield looms, is now deemed worthy of a place in the +collector's museum. + +It required little effort of fancy and skill, by the simple process of +evolution and survival of the fittest, to expand this plan of cutting +away threads and replacing them with others to doing away _entirely_ +with existing and attached threads, and supplying the whole with a +pattern of threads laid down on some geometric fashion on a backing of +parchment, _working over_ and _connecting_ the patterns together, and +afterwards liberating the entire work from the parchment, thereby making +what was known at the time as "punto in aria," or working with the +needle-point in the air, literally "_out of nothing_." + +Strange as this may appear, this was the origin, in the fifteenth +century, of the whole wonderful fabric which afterwards became known as +"Point lace," which altered and even revolutionised dress, made life +itself beautiful, and supplied the women of Europe with a livelihood +gained in an easy, artistic, and delightful manner. It also, however, +led to ruinous expenditure in every country, at times requiring special +edicts to restrain its extravagance, and even the revival of the old +Sumptuary laws to repress it. + +The earliest known lace, and by far the most popular with all classes, +was "Reticella," which was the first kind evolved on the "punto in aria" +principle. Until the discovery of an easy and simple way of decorating +the linen ruffs and cuffs of the period these had been quite plain, as +many contemporary portraits show. Afterwards the fashion of trimming +garments of all descriptions with the pointed wiry edges of Venice +became a mania, and led to imitation in almost every country of Europe. +The convents turned out an immense quantity, thereby adding enormously +to the incomes of their establishments. It is assumed that it is to the +nuns of Italy we owe the succeeding elaboration of Reticella, +"Needlepoint," the long, placid hours spent in the quiet convent +gardens, lending themselves to the refinement and delicacy which this +exquisite fabric made necessary. However this may be, it is certain that +in a few years the rise and development of Needlepoint lace-making was +little short of phenomenal, and every convent was busy making it and +teaching their poorer lay sisters the art. Some of the wonderful Old +Point of this period is absolutely finer than the naked eye can see, a +powerful magnifying glass being necessary to discern how the marvellous +"toile" or "gimpe" is made. + +[Illustration: ORIGINAL PATTERNS DESIGNED BY VINCIOLA. + +Seventeenth Century.] + +A little later, but still contemporary with the introduction of Venetian +lace, a Pillow lace was being made in Flanders, the origin of which +is not as yet discovered. It is possible that the fine flax thread grown +and manufactured there may, at the time of weaving, have suggested a +looser and more ornamental material, but that remains a matter of +conjecture. There must, however, have been an interchange of examples, +as about this time Pillow-made lace appeared in Italy, and led to the +making of the Milanese and Genoese varieties, and Needlepoint motifs +appeared amongst the woven network of Flanders. + +Lace, under the name of "Lacis," had been known in France from the time +of Catherine de Medici, who patronised the manufacturers and used it +lavishly. About 1585 she induced Federico di Vinciolo, a lace-maker and +designer of Venice, to settle in France, and there the making of +Venetian lace was attempted. A mere slavish imitation of the Venetian +school resulted, and it was not until the age of the _Grande Monarque_, +Louis XIV., that French lace rivalled that of Venice. + +Colbert, the great French Minister, becoming alarmed at the enormous +sums spent on Italian lace, determined to put a check to its +importation; and, by forbidding its use, establishing lace schools near +Alencon, and bribing Italian workers to come over as organisers and +teachers, started the manufacture of lace on an extensive scale, the +beautiful fabrics known as Point d'Alencon, Point d'Argentan, and Point +d'Argentella being the result. It is frequently said that the last-named +lace came from Genoa or Milan, but most of the present-day authorities +agree that this is one of the many fairy tales with which the passing of +time has adorned the history of lace. + +The persecution of the Protestants when the Huguenots fled to England, +bringing with them their arts of silk-weaving and lace-making, led to +the introduction of English lace. Devonshire apparently received a +contingent of laceworkers quite distinct from those who settled in +Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire, and from the first stages showed far +finer methods and designs. With the exception of "Old Honiton," England +cannot boast of anything very fine, and even this is merely a +meaningless meandering of woven tape-like design for the greater part. +The lace of Buckinghamshire ranks, perhaps, lowest in the scale of lace +products, its only merit being its extreme durability. + +The laces of Ireland are of comparatively recent growth, and though in +many instances exquisitely fine, do not as yet show much originality. + +[Illustration: ORIGINAL PATTERNS DESIGNED BY VINCIOLA.] + + + + +II + +THE ART OF LACE-MAKING + + +[Illustration: NEEDLEPOINT RESEAUX. + +No. 1.--Brussels. +No. 2.--Alencon. +No. 3.--Argentan. +No. 4.--Argentella.] + + + + +II + +THE ART OF LACE-MAKING + + Needlepoint--Pillow Laces--Charts of various Reseaux--Technical + Terms. + + +Lace-making naturally falls into two classes--the Needlepoint and Pillow +varieties. In some laces, more especially of the Belgian class, there is +a _mixed_ lace, the "toile" or pattern, being worked with the needle, +and the ground, or "reseau," made round it on the pillow and _vice +versa_. + +To the first-named class we must assign the Needlepoint laces of Italy +and the exquisite handmade laces of France. To the latter order belong +the early Macrame lace, called "Punto a Groppo"; the Genoese and +Milanese laces of Italy; Mechlin and Brussels of Belgium; Valenciennes, +Lille, and Chantilly of France; and the English laces of Honiton, +Buckinghamshire, and Bedfordshire. + +Pillow lace may be easily distinguished from Point lace, as in the +former the ground, or reseau, is made of plaited threads. That of Point +lace is composed of threads made by the use of the buttonhole stitch +only, or, in the case of Alencon point, the mesh is worked in a special +manner. The later laces, _i.e._, those made during the last hundred +years, have frequently a ground of machine lace, and thus, strictly +speaking, are not lace at all, but only embroideries or appliques. The +machine-made ground can be distinguished by sense of touch alone. If we +take a piece of hand-made net between the finger and thumb and slightly +roll it, it will gather in a soft little roll, with the touch almost of +floss silk. The machine-made net is hard, stiff, and wiry, and remains +perceptibly so in this test. Also, the mesh of machine-made lace is as +regular as though made with a fine machine fret-saw, that of hand-made +lace being of varying sizes, and often following the pattern of the lace +design. + +The accompanying diagram illustrates the various grounds, and will +prove an infallible guide in distinguishing the points of difference +between Point and Pillow lace. + +Various special and technical terms are used in describing the method of +making lace. Without burdening the reader too much, a few special terms +must be explained. + +_Brides_ (literally "bridges").--These are the connections between the +various parts of a lace design, both in Needle-point and Bobbin lace. In +the former, they are made entirely of a strand or two of thread thrown +across, and then buttonholed over, sometimes with tiny loops on the +edges, and in Venetian lace often having minute stars worked upon them. + +[Illustration: PILLOW RESEAUX. + +No. 1.--Valenciennes. +No. 2.--Brussels. +No. 3.--Lille. +No. 4.--Mechlin.] + +_Beading._--A tiny looped edge used to finish woven or Pillow-made lace. + +_Bobbins._--One of the essential parts of a Pillow worker's outfit. +These are small, elongated bobbins made of ivory, bone, or wood, on +which is wound the lace-maker's thread. Sometimes they have been made +very ornamental with carving and other decorations, and frequently have +"gingles," or a bunch of coloured beads attached to one end. The terms +"Bobbin lace" and "Bone lace" are derived from these and are synonymous +with "Pillow lace." + +_Cordonnet._--In most _Point_ laces the design is outlined with a raised +_cord_ either worked over closely with buttonhole stitches, or made +separately and then stitched down. The Cordonnet is one of the +characteristic features of the raised Venetian points and the French +laces of Alencon or Argentan. + +_Couronnes._--These are decorations of the Cordonnet especially +noticeable in the raised Venetian laces, in which sometimes the lace is +raised and worked upon no less than four separate times. + +_Dentele._--Lace designed in scallop-form, chiefly used for border +laces. + +_Fillings._--This word most easily explains the ordinary terms of +"modes" and "a jours." The inner parts of the pattern in Needlepoint and +Pillow lace are filled in with various ornamental stitches, showing an +amazing variety of design. By these fillings various laces may often be +distinguished, as each factory had its favourite "modes." + +_Grounds._--There are two varieties of grounds, one made with Brides, +and the other either with Needlepoint or Pillow network. Other names +for these are "Reseaux" and "Fonds." The method of making Needlepoint or +woven ground often decides the date and class of the lace. + +_Guipure._--Literally a _tape lace_. The name however is applied to all +Pillow laces having a tape-like design on them. + +_Picots._--The little loops used to ornament a plain bride or tie. + +[Illustration: VENETIAN ROSE POINT. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +III + +THE LACES OF ITALY + + +[Illustration: VENETIAN ROSE POINT. + +Seventeenth Century. (_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +III + +THE LACES OF ITALY + +_The Venetian Laces_ + + Venetian lace--"Rose Point"--"Point de Neige"--"Gros + Point"--"Punto Tagliato a Foliami"--The South Kensington + Collection. + + +Needlepoint lace is made with needle and thread and principally in +buttonhole stitches. A traced parchment pattern is procured, the outline +made with a solitary thread stitched down to the parchment at frequent +intervals. The thread is then worked over with fine buttonhole stitches; +the modes or fillings have a fine network of threads stretched across, +afterwards being buttonholed into a variety of designs. The edges are +then again worked upon with loops or picots, and in "Rose Point" tiny +stars or roses are worked on suitable parts of the design, sometimes the +"roses" or "stars" being three in numbers, one poised upon the other. +This is known as "Point de Neige" the whole surface of the lace being +literally sprinkled with tiny stars somewhat representing a fine +snowfall. The design is then connected with fine "brides," these in +their turn being dotted and purled with stars and loops. Most of this +exquisite lace requires a powerful magnifying-glass to discern the +intricacy of the work. + +The finest lace of this variety was produced in the sixteenth century, +the designs being bold, handsome, and purely Renaissance in type. That +of the Louis Quatorze period shows the personal influence of his reign, +frequently having tiny figures worked in the design. A collar in my +possession has the Indian worshipping the sun (the King's glory was said +to rival that of the sun) repeated in each scallop. This was a favourite +design in the magnificent "Point de France" which was made during the +long reign of Louis, under the management of Colbert. + +It is absolutely certain that the laces known as Venetian Point +originated in Italy. Pattern books still exist showing how the early +Reticella developed into this magnificent lace. In the National Library +at the South Kensington Museum, may be seen the very patterns designed +by Vinciolo, Vicellio, and Isabella Parasole. These publications +actually came from Venice, and being reproduced in France, Germany, +Belgium, and England, quickly aroused immense enthusiasm, and +lace-making spread far and wide, at first all other laces being mere +imitations of the Venetian. + +[Illustration: CORALLINE POINT (VENETIAN).] + +[Illustration: POINT PLAT DE VENISE (FLAT VENETIAN). + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +[Illustration: MARIE DE MEDICIS WEARING THE MEDICIS COLLAR TO DISPLAY +VENETIAN LACES.] + +The chief varieties of the Venetian laces are known as Rose Point, Point +de Neige, Gros Point de Venise (often erroneously attributed to Spain +and called Spanish Point), and Point Plat de Venise. A much rarer +variety is "Venetian point a reseau," which is the flat point worked +round with a Needlepoint ground or mesh, the network following no proper +order but being simply worked round the pattern and following its +curves. + +The chief characteristics of Venetian lace are the buttonhole Cordonnet, +fine or thick according to the style of lace; the wonderful diversities +of the fillings worked in buttonhole stitches; the elaborate decoration +of the Cordonnet; and the starry effects of the brides or ties. In the +flat Venetian Point there is no Cordonnet. + +These Italian laces were admired and purchased by all the European +countries, and the cities of Venice and Florence made enormous fortunes. +The fashions of the day led to their extensive use, Marie de Medicis +introducing the Medici collar trimmed with Venetian points specially to +display them. At a little later period the collar became more falling +and the heavier "Gros point" was used. Men and women alike wore +lace-trimmed garments to an excessive degree, the collar and cuff +trimmings being composed of wide Venetian lace and the silken scarf worn +across the body being edged with narrower and finer lace. + +The principal designs for the Venetian lace of all periods were scrolls +of flowers conventionalised in the Renaissance taste of the time. The +generic name for all laces of the finest period is "Punto tagliato a +foliami." The laces of this time are now almost priceless. They are +genuine works of art, worked slowly and patiently under the clear light +of the Italian skies by women who were naturally artistic and beauty +loving, and who, while working the shining needle and fairy thread in +and out of the intricacies of the design sang the pretty "Lace Songs" +which may be heard at the Burano Lace School even now, although 200 or +300 years old. Many specimens of this exquisite lace are to be found in +the South Kensington Museum, where the flounce given by Mrs. Bolckow at +once explains the whole scheme of Venetian lace-making. + +Such lace is not to be purchased now except at great price. The piece +illustrated, see page 55, was only 1-1/8 yards in length, and was sold +for L145 by one of our leading lacemen. Barely 5 yards of Venetian lace, +only 2 inches wide and _in rags_, was sold at Debenham & Storr's in +August, 1907, for L60; and even the smallest collar or a pair of cuffs +runs well into L10. + +Even in the days of its manufacture this lace commanded high prices. In +the inventory of Queen Elizabeth's gowns we find such entries as-- + +"To 1 yard Double Italian Cut-worke, 1/4 yd. wide. 55/4. + + " 3 yds. broad needlework lace of Italy, with purls. 50/- per yd." + +James II. paid L29 for a cravat. + +[Illustration: VERY FINE EXAMPLE OF "GROS POINT DE VENISE."] + + + + +IV + +THE LACES OF GENOA AND MILAN + + +[Illustration: LOUIS XIII. OF FRANCE, SHOWING VANDYKE LACE COLLAR AND +NARROWER LACE ON SCARF.] + + + + +IV + +THE LACES OF GENOA AND MILAN + + Argentella wrongly called Italian--Genoese--Mixed + laces--Milanese--Macrame. + + +These are mostly Pillow laces, but fine Point laces were also +manufactured in these towns. In the first-named town it is said that the +lace called "Argentella" was made, but this is extremely doubtful, most +authorities arguing that it was certainly a French lace made at the best +period. + +A very representative lace of Genoa is known as collar lace, very widely +used for the falling collars of the Vandyke period. It was an +exceedingly beautiful and decorative lace, and almost indestructible. +Specimens of this lace can even now easily be secured at a fair price. +The laces known as "Pillow Guipure" are somewhat open to question, the +authorities at South Kensington Museum agreeing to differ, and labelling +most of the specimens "Italian or Flemish." The finer pieces of this +type of lace may safely be described as "Flemish," as the flax-thread +grown and made in Flanders was much finer than that grown in the +Southern Countries. + +Much of the Genoa lace was worked in what we term "mixed lace," the +design being woven on the pillow, and the ground and fillings worked in +with the needle either in a network or by brides and picots. A much +inferior kind is made with a woven braid or tape, the turns of the +pattern being made in twisted or puckered braid, much after the style of +the handmade Point lace made in England some thirty years ago. This lace +was known as "Mezzo Punto," though the French were discourteous enough +to term it "Point de Canaille," as undoubtedly it was an imitation of +the finer laces made in a loose, poor style. + +The lace of Milan is unquestionably the most beautiful of the Pillow +laces of Italy. While resembling the plaited lace of Genoa, there is +more individuality about it. Much of this fine lace was worked for +church vestments and altar cloths. Various heraldic devices are +frequently introduced, surrounded with elegant scroll designs, the whole +being filled up with woven reseau, the lines of which are by no means +regular, but are made to fill in the interstices. + +Yet another Italian lace is known as + + +_Punto a Groppo, or Macrame_. + +No doubt this was the earliest form of woven lace, and, indeed, it may +claim an origin as early as the first garments worn by mankind. In the +earliest remains of antiquity a _fringe_ often decorates the edges of +garments, curtains, and floor-covering, and seems to be a natural and +fitting finish to what would otherwise be a hard, straight line. In +the various Assyrian and Egyptian monuments this is noted again and +again. + +[Illustration: GENOESE LACE. + +Sixteenth or Seventeenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Some of the sixteenth-century pieces which we possess show simply an +elaboration of the knotted fringe, while much of the later work is +exceptionally fine. The work is so well known, owing to its revival +during the last thirty years in a coarse form, that it needs little +description. Its use, even at its best period, was confined to household +use, for which purpose it seems particularly adapted. + +[Illustration: MILANESE LACE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +V + +THE LACES OF FRANCE + + +[Illustration: "CUT-WORKE."] + +[Illustration: LACIS.] + +[Illustration: OLD ITALIAN AND FRENCH CUT AND DRAWN WORK AND "LACIS." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +V + +THE LACES OF FRANCE + +_The Needlepoint Laces of France_ + + Catherine de Medici's collection of "Lacis"--Establishment of + lace-making by Colbert--"Point de France"--"Point + d'Alencon"--"Point d'Argentan"--Modern reproduction of these at + Burano, Italy. + + +France in the sixteenth century, as always, led the van of fashion. Lace +appears to have been extensively used long before its apotheosis at the +Court of Louis le Grand, otherwise Louis XIV. Catherine de Medici +patronised the manufacture of "_Lacis_," which was merely darned +netting, more or less fine. At this time "Lacis" and "Cut-worke" were +practically all that was known or used. Bed-hangings, curtains, and +furniture-coverings were covered with alternate squares of lacis and +cutwork. Afterwards the Reticella laces of Italy were imported and had +an immense vogue, but it was not until the artistically glorious time of +Louis XIV. that an attempt was made to encourage a manufacture of French +laces. + +Colbert, the astute Minister of Louis XIV., became alarmed at the +immense sums of money which went out of the country to purchase the +laces of Venice, and, by means of bribing the best workers of the +Venetian schools, he induced them to settle at L'Onray, near Alencon. In +1665 he had so far succeeded that lace rivalling that of Venice was +being produced. The Venetians became alarmed in their turn (as, indeed, +they had need to be) and issued an edict, ordering the lace-workers to +return forthwith, or, failing this, the nearest relative would be +imprisoned for life, and steps would be taken to have the truant +lace-worker _killed_. If, however, he or she returned, complete +forgiveness would be extended, and work found them _for life_ at +handsome remuneration. History does not tell us the result of this +decree, but it evidently failed to destroy the lace manufacture of +France. + +At first the lace manufactured at Alencon received the name of "Point de +France," and was absolutely indistinguishable from that of Venice. Its +magnificence of design, indeed, may be said to have exceeded anything +before attempted. The introduction of tiny figures was attributable to +the overwhelming personality of Louis XIV., and was symbolical of his +magnificent sway and far-reaching influence. In the illustration, page +55, an especially fine specimen of the lace, Madame de Montespan is seen +seated under the crown, two small Indians are on either side; a tree +bearing flags and trophies completes this tribute to the genius of the +lace-makers and the splendour of the Court. + +[Illustration: "POINT DE FRANCE." + +(_The property of Lady Kenmare._)] + +[Illustration: POINT D'ALENCON. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +The name "Point de France" is given to all lace made from its +commencement by Colbert's direction until about 1678, when the +lace-workers, perhaps forgetting the traditions of the Venetian school, +developed a style of their own and the work became more distinctly +French, being more delicate, finer in substance, the patterns clearer +and more defined. The importation also of the finer flax thread from +Flanders brought the more exquisite Pillow lace of Brussels to the +notice of the French lace-workers. The French, as a nation, have always +been foremost in seizing upon new ideas and adapting them to their own +artistic requirements. In this instance the result was admirable, and it +gave to the world, not the finest lace, as it was impossible to surpass +the earliest Venetian Point laces, but certainly the next lace in order +of merit, "Point d'Alencon." The chief characteristic of the lace is the +fine, clear ground, the stiff Cordonnet outlining the pattern, and the +exquisite patterns in the "jours" or fillings. + +The cordonnet of Alencon is the only one which has horsehair for its +foundation. A strand of hair is carefully stitched down to the edges and +is buttonholed over with the finest thread, and is said, although giving +the lace quite a character of its own, to have been the cause of much of +its destruction, as, in washing, the hair contracts and curls. It will +be noticed also that the ground is worked in strips, _shortways of the +lace of less than an inch in length_, afterwards being stitched together +in what is known as "fine joining." So elaborate was the original Point +d'Alencon that no less than eighteen workers were engaged on one single +piece. Later the number was reduced to twelve, when the patterns became +less ornate. + +Although the factory of Alencon existed well into the early nineteenth +century, the style of lace gradually deteriorated, until it is now +non-existent! The lace made during the long reign of Louis XIV. is +considered by far the finest and best, showing both grandeur of style +and pattern and exquisite workmanship. Under Louis XV. the lace was +equally well made, but the patterns followed the Rococo designs which +were now introduced into all other decorative work, while in the reign +of the ill-fated Louis XVI. it went completely out of fashion, Marie +Antoinette affecting a much simpler style of lace. The Revolution +finally caused the complete overthrow of Alencon lace, as of all fine +art work in France. An attempt was made by Napoleon I. to revive it, but +its glories had passed, and the hands of the workers had lost their +cunning, the result being known as the worst type of lace, stiff and +ugly in design and coarse of execution. + + +"_Point d'Argentan._" + +This lace is practically the same as Alencon with a variation of ground, +which, to the uninitiated, appears coarse. A magnifying glass, however, +will speedily dispel this illusion. The ground in itself is a marvellous +piece of work, each of the sides of the mesh being covered with ten +buttonhole stitches. Very frequently a mixed lace of Alencon and +Argentan is found, the result being very fine. + +[Illustration: "POINT DE FRANCE." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +[Illustration: POINT D'ARGENTELLA.] + + +_Point d'Argentella._ + +About this lace most authorities dispute, some stoutly advocating its +claims to be French lace entirely and others averring that it was made +_in imitation_ of the Point d'Alencon by the Genoese. Be this as it may, +the lace known as Point d'Argentella is exceptionally fine even amongst +other fine laces, and is noted most specially for the fine "jours" which +form an essential part of the pattern, every effort apparently being +made to give extra scope for their employment. The specimen illustrated +shows some of these "jours" having the characteristic mayflower, +lozenge, and dotted patterns. + +Much modern lace of this type is now made at Burano, Italy, where the +coarse Italian lace formerly made there has been entirely superseded. It +strongly imitates Alencon and Argentan lace, but is without the raised +cord which is so typical of these, having the pattern outlined with flat +buttonhole stitches only. By many connoisseurs this is considered the +finest lace of this age, being far superior to modern Brussels. It is +entirely handmade, which cannot be, unfortunately, averred for Brussels, +as the fine machine-made net, woven from the exquisitely fine thread +manufactured in Flanders and Belgium, serves as the ground for all +Brussels lace made at the present time, except when special orders like +Royal trousseaux are in hand. The lace-makers of Burano, it may be +added, imitate the finest Venetian Rose Point, Point de Gaze, Alencon, +ever produced, the prices comparing very favourably with the old work, +though still very costly. + +[Illustration: POINT D'ARGENTAN WITH POINT D'ALENCON BORDER. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +[Illustration: ARGENTELLA LACE, SHOWING THE "PARTRIDGE-EYE" GROUND. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +VI + +THE PILLOW LACES OF FRANCE + + +[Illustration: EARLY VALENCIENNES. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +[Illustration: OLD VALENCIENNES. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +VI + +THE PILLOW LACES OF FRANCE + + Valenciennes, "Vraie" and "Fausse"--Lille--Chantilly-- + Blonde--Caen and Brittany. + + +_Valenciennes._ + +Valenciennes was formerly part of Flanders, being in the province of +Hainault. It became a French town in 1668 by treaty. Being a Flemish +town, the lace made there was purely Pillow lace, and in fineness of +thread and beauty of design it rivalled in its early stages some of the +fine old Flemish laces, which are more like ornamental cambric than +anything else. + +There are two kinds of Valenciennes lace, known as "Vraie" and "Fausse." +These names are very misleading, as they merely denote the laces made in +the town itself, or in the outskirts. + +Early Valenciennes can only be distinguished from Flemish laces of the +same age by the difference in the _ground_. By reference to the little +chart of lace stitches the distinction will easily be seen, the +Valenciennes being much closer and thicker in the plait, and having +four threads on each side of its diamond-shaped mesh. Conventional +scrolls and flowers were used as designs for the toile, the ground and +the pattern being made at the same time. + +This lace is said to have been worked, like that of Brussels, in dark, +damp cellars, the moist atmosphere being necessary to prevent the tiny +thread breaking. The lace-workers became nearly blind, and quite +useless, long before they reached thirty years of age. + +So expensive was the fabric that a pair of ruffles for a gentleman's +coat would sell for 4,000 livres. Madame du Barri made extravagant use +of this lovely lace. In her wardrobe accounts are mentioned, in 1771, +head-dress, throatlets, fichus, and ruffles, "all plisse de Vraie +Valenciennes." The amount of lace used for a head-dress alone is said to +have cost 2,400 livres. + +The "Vraie Valenciennes" was practically indestructible, earning the +nickname of the "Eternal Valenciennes" from its durability. The +well-to-do bourgeoise used to invest her savings in real lace, +treasuring and wearing it on all best occasions for a lifetime. + +The lace-makers of the town itself were so satisfied with their own lace +that they proudly boasted that if a length commenced in the town of +Valenciennes were taken and completed _by the same worker, and with the +same thread_, outside their own damp atmosphere, the exact point of +difference would be shown in the piece. + +[Illustration: "OLD LILLE." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +The earliest Valenciennes laces show a closer design than that made +later, which, by the way, many connoisseurs much prefer. The latter type +is of clearer ground and more open design. The flowers do not follow the +large scroll-like pattern of Flanders, but suggest the detached sprays +and festoons of Alencon and Argentan. In both types there is no cord +outlining either pattern or edge. All is flat as a piece of fine lawn. + + +_Lille._ + +By no means a _favourite_ lace at any time, Lille ranks next in merit as +a hand-made lace. The mesh is clearer and larger than most French or +Belgian laces, being made by the simple twisting of two threads on four +sides. The patterns are simple, and are outlined with a loose flax +thread of silky appearance. The straight edges which characterise Old +Lille lace certainly did not lend elegance to it. A large manufacture in +black lace was commenced, and the black silk mantles of the eighteenth +century were lavishly trimmed with it. It is entirely out of favour at +this day, however, only the finest white variety being sought after. + +Lace is still manufactured at Lille, but the patterns of Mechlin are +copied, although the tiny square dots, one of the distinguishing points +of old Lille, are still used. + + +_Chantilly._ + +The white laces of Chantilly much resemble Lille, having the same fine, +clear ground and a thick, silky-looking thread outlining the pattern. A +little lace school was established by the Duchesse de Rohan early in +the seventeenth century, and for quite a hundred years white laces were +made, and became popular. Marie Antoinette used this pretty lace as well +as Valenciennes extensively to trim her favourite lawn dresses and +fichus when she and the ladies of her Court retired to the Petit Trianon +to play at being shepherdesses. + +About the middle of the eighteenth century Chantilly began to produce +black silk lace of very fine quality. This is practically the only black +lace for which there is any market. A Chantilly fan or a Chantilly shawl +will always find purchasers. The exquisite fineness of its ground, the +elegance of its floral festoons and bouquets, make it a desirable +possession. With the Revolution the manufacture of real old black +Chantilly ceased, and was only revived with the Empire, when, in +addition to copying the old designs, the manufacture of the famous +_blonde_ laces was commenced. + + +_French Blonde Lace._ + +At first these filmy silk laces were made in the natural colour floss +silk imported from China, hence its name "Blonde." Some of the finest +specimens are in this colour. Afterwards, when the art of bleaching the +silk was discovered, it was made in a peculiarly silvery colour, the +loosely woven silk being worked in patterns on what appears a ground of +gossamer. Black Blonde was afterwards manufactured, the lace being very +different to that of nineteenth-century manufacture, the mesh being +large and open. This was a favourite lace with the Spaniards for +mantillas, and much prosperity resulted to the little town of Chantilly. +As with all other laces, the introduction of machinery killed the +industry as an art, and the only Blonde laces now made are by machine, +and are quite inartistic and inelegant. Hand-made Chantilly in black +silk is still manufactured, but it has only a limited output. + +[Illustration: "THE EMPRESS EUGENIE" WEARING BLONDE LACE. + +(_From a Baxter print._)] + + +_Other French Laces._ + +Lace has been made in many smaller towns in France, but in no instance +has it been of sufficient artistic merit to have made a name. Caen +manufactured Blonde lace in imitation of Chantilly. In Normandy the +peasant women and girls in the eighteenth century were specially +diligent, and made praiseworthy imitations of Mechlin, Flemish guipure +laces, and Brussels, and also introduced the working of gold and silver +thread and even beads, which was much used in churches. Some really +exquisite Blonde lace made in this manner was produced at Caen, fine +pearls were used in the place of beads, and this lace became extremely +popular in England. The Empress Eugenie was particularly fond of it, and +in most of the portraits of her at the zenith of her beauty she is seen +wearing decorated Blonde lace. It is said that this lace so soon soiled +and spoiled in the making that only women having specially dry hands +could be employed, and that during the summer months the lace was worked +in the open air, and in the winter in rooms specially built over +cow-houses, so that the animals' breath might just sufficiently warm +the workers in this smokeless atmosphere. Other towns engaged in +lace-making were Havre, Dieppe (the latter town making a lace resembling +Valenciennes), Bayeux, which carried on an extensive trade with the +Southern Islands; Mexico and Spain taking an inferior and heavy Blonde +lace for mantillas. + +In Bretagne so dear is lace to the heart of the French peasant woman +that every garment is trimmed with lace, often of her own making; and +along with the provision of a little "dot" for her daughter she makes +pieces of lace for her wedding dress. A curious custom is noted, that +the peasant woman often wears this treasured garment only twice, once +for her wedding and lastly for her funeral! + + + + +VII + +THE LACES OF FLANDERS + + +[Illustration: POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Period Louis XIV. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +VII + +THE LACES OF FLANDERS + + Early Flemish--Brussels lace--Point d'Angleterre--Cost of real + Flanders flax thread--Popularity of Brussels lace--Point Gaze. + + +Whether Italy or Flanders first invented both Needlepoint and Pillow +laces will ever remain a moot point. Both countries claim priority, and +both appear to have equal right. Italian Needlepoint without doubt +evolved itself from the old Greek or Reticella laces, that in turn being +a development of "Cutworke" and drawn thread work. Flanders produces her +paintings by early artists in which the portraits are adorned with lace +as early as the fourteenth century. An altar-piece by Quentin Matys, +dated 1495, shows a girl making Pillow lace, and later, in 1581, an old +engraving shows another girl busy with her pillow and bobbins. An early +Flemish poet thus rhapsodises over his countrywomen's handiworks: + + "Of many arts, one surpasses all; + The threads woven by the strange power of the hand-- + Threads, which the dropping of the spider would in vain + attempt to imitate, + And which Pallas herself would confess she had never known." + +Whether Flanders imitated the Italian laces or not, it is unquestioned +that every other lace-making country imitated _her_. Germany, Sweden, +France, Russia, and England have, one after the other, adopted her +method to such an extent that, following the tactics of Venice in 1698, +she also issued an edict threatening punishment to all who would entice +her workers away. + +So alike are the early laces of Flanders that it is impossible to +distinguish what is known as Flemish Point, Brussels Point, and Point +d'Angleterre. The last-named lace is peculiar, inasmuch as it has a +French appellation, is named "English," and yet is purely Brussels in +character. Two stories gather round this lace, which accounts for its +name. One is that the English Government in the time of Charles II., +seeing so much money go out of the country, forbade the importation of +Brussels lace. The English lace merchants, not to be done out of their +immense profits, smuggled it over in large quantities, and produced it +as having been made in Devonshire, and sold it under the name of English +Point. Another legend is that when Colbert, in the reign of Louis XIV., +determined to encourage lace-making in his own country, made prohibitive +the importation of any other lace than France's own manufacture, the +French Court, which had already become enamoured of Brussels lace, +therefore had it smuggled into England and thence to France, as +_English laces_ were at that time too insignificant to come under +Colbert's ban. + +[Illustration: POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Period of Louis XIV. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +Whichever tale we choose to believe is of little consequence. It is +sufficient to say that fine Point d'Angleterre is simply Brussels of the +best period when the glorious Renaissance was at its height. It is +absolutely indistinguishable from Brussels of the same period. The +specimen lappet, illustrated, shows the "figure" motif which appears in +"Point de France" and the old "Venetian Point," and which at once dates +its manufacture. + +Practically the term Flanders or Flemish lace can be applied to all the +laces made in Flanders and Belgium of the earliest periods. It is +peculiarly fine; the specimen shown is as fine as gossamer, showing a +total absence of Cordonnet, of course, and not even having the loose +thread which marks the stems and leaves of Brussels and Angleterre. The +flax of Flanders was at the time of the great lace industry known and +imported to all the towns engaged in making it. Italy could procure +nothing so fine and eminently suitable to the delicate work she made her +own as this fine thread, grown in Flanders, and spun in dark, damp +rooms, where only a single ray of light was allowed to enter. The thread +was so fine, it is said, that it was imperceptible to the naked eye and +was manipulated by touch only. The cost of this thread was L240 a pound, +and one pound could be made into lace worth L720! Real Flanders lace +thread even now, spun with the help of machinery, costs L70, and is +nothing like so durable as the old threads. When we consider that lace +to be known as "Old Lace" must be two hundred or three hundred years +old, we can understand the strength of this fairy thread, which was like +a spider's web in filminess and yet durable enough to last centuries of +wear, and remain as a lasting memorial of its beauty. + + +BRUSSELS + +The early Flemish laces cannot be traced to any particular town, but +Brussels early obtained a reputation for the production of the soft, +elegant laces which are variously known as "Real old Brussels," "Point +d'Angleterre," "Point d'Aiguille," and "Point de Gaze." Almost every +woman, although knowing little about lace as an art, knows and easily +recognises "Brussels." It has ever been the most popular lace, partly +because its price has never been actually prohibitive, although always +costly. Choice pieces of Old Brussels, with real ground, rank among the +laces of France and Venice as pieces of price, but the later period, +especially the kind known as Brussels applique, is within everybody's +reach, even if only as a border for a best handkerchief. + +[Illustration: "OLD BRUSSELS" (HAND-MADE GROUND). + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +[Illustration: BRUSSELS LAPPET, MADE IN IMITATION OF ALENCON AND +ARGENTAN.] + +Lace made at Brussels at all periods has one characteristic that places +it at once and makes identification easy at a glance. The threads of the +toile--that is, the pattern--follows the _curves_, instead of, as in +other Flanders laces, being straight _up_ and _down_ and _across_, each +thread being exactly at right angles to the other; Brussels lace also +has a distinctive edge to its pattern. It has no Cordonnet, but a +little set of looped stitches worked along the edge of the design, +afterwards whipped over to keep the edge in place. This is most clearly +seen in every specimen, and, in conjunction with the curved toile, at +once settles the vexed question of the origin of Point d'Angleterre. + +The mesh or ground is, again, quite different to other laces. It has +three varieties of ground-- + +1. One, mostly used in Point d'Angleterre, being of fine "brides" with +four or five picots, but this ground is also seen in Venetian and French +laces. + +2. A hand-made ground made of looped buttonhole stitches, which is the +finest and most gossamer-like of all; and + +3. A woven ground made on the pillow with plaited thread, very like +Mechlin, but under the magnifying glass having two longer sides to its +hexagonal mesh, and therefore being more open and clear. + +The hand, or rather needlepoint, ground was three times more expensive +than the woven, as it was stronger and more lasting. The special value +of the "vrai reseau" in our own day is that it can be imperceptibly +repaired, the broken stitches replaced, whereas in the woven ground the +point of junction must show. + +The needle-made net is so fine that one piece in my possession, though +measuring 3/4 yard by 8 inches can easily, in its widest part, be +gathered and passed through a finger ring. At the present day this net +is not made, and even the fine woven ground is not used except for Royal +wedding orders or for exhibition purposes. A magnificent piece +belonging to Messrs. Haywards, of New Bond Street (which cannot be +photographed, unfortunately, as it is between two sheets of glass, and +might fall to pieces if taken out), was made for George IV., and not +delivered, owing no doubt to the usual depleted state of that monarch's +exchequer. Messrs. Haywards (whose courtesy is as boundless as their +reputation) are always pleased to show this and their other splendid +specimen collections to those interested in old lace. + +Perhaps no lace is so diversified in style as Brussels. At first it was +purely Flemish, and almost indistinguishable from it. Then the Venetian +influence crept in, and elaboration of pattern and the Renaissance +scrolls and flower work showed itself. At the Louis Quatorze period the +introduction of the "fairy people," seen at its finest and best in Point +de France, marks a time of special beauty. Afterwards the influence of +Alencon was shown (though it never rivalled the exquisite lace of this +factory), and from that time to the present day these designs have +remained for use in its best work. + +Some of the choicest specimens of old Brussels are shown in the now +discarded "lappets," which when a lace head-piece and lappets were part +of every gentlewoman's costume, were actually regulated by Sumptuary +Laws as to length. The longer the lappets the higher the rank. + +[Illustration: BRUSSELS LAPPET. + +Eighteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +The great Napoleon, while reviving the lace-making of Alencon, specially +admired fine old Brussels, and at the birth of his only son, the little +"King of Rome," ordered a christening garment covered with the +Napoleonic "N's," crowns and cherubs. This was sold in 1903 at +Christie's for L120. At the same sale a Court train realised L140. + +In the "Creevy Papers, 1768-1838," mention is made of Lord Charles +Somerset complaining of not having slept all night, "not having had a +minute's peace through sleeping in 'Cambrik sheets,' the Brussels lace +with which the pillows were trimmed tickling his face"! This occurred at +Wynyards, the seat of the Earl of Londonderry. + +Queen Anne followed the extravagant fashion of wearing the costliest +laces which William III. and Queen Mary carried to such an excess. In +1710 she paid L151 for 21 yards of fine Brussels edging, and two years +later the account for Brussels and Mechlin laces amounted to L1,418. + +In the succeeding reign the ladies of George I.'s period wore lappets +and flounces, caps, tuckers, aprons, stomachers, and handkerchiefs, all +made of Brussels. + +In the time of George II. lace was even more worn, but English lace +began to rival Brussels, not in quality, but as a substitute. + +George III. and his wife, Queen Charlotte, were economists of the first +order, and personal decoration was rigidly tabooed; hence the almost +total extinction of lace as an article of apparel, while in George IV.'s +time dress had evolved itself into shimmery silks and lawns, lace being +merely a trimming, and the enormous head-dress decorated more frequently +with a band of ribbon. + +An exquisite portrait of Louis Philippe's Queen, Marie Amelia, by the +early Victorian painter Winterhalter (whose paintings are again by the +revival of fashion coming into favour) shows this fine old _grande dame_ +in black velvet dress covered with three graduated flounces of Brussels +lace, cap and lappets and "tucker" of the same lace, lace fan, and, sad +to relate, a scarf of English machine-made net, worked with English run +embroidery! + +Although good Queen Adelaide had a pretty fancy for lace, she wore +little of it, and it was left to Queen Victoria to revive the glory of +wearing Brussels to any extent; and she, alas! was sufficiently +patriotic to encourage home-made products by wearing almost exclusively +Honiton, which I personally am not good Englishwoman enough to admire +except at its latest stage (just the past few years), when lace-making, +as almost every other art work in this country, is emerging from what, +from an artistic point of view, has been one long Slough of Despond. + +[Illustration: COMTESSE D'ARTOIS, WIFE OF ONE OF LOUIS XIV.'S GRANDSONS, +WEARING FINE BRUSSELS LACE.] + + + + +VIII + +THE MODERN BRUSSELS LACES AND MECHLIN + + +[Illustration: AN OLD PRINT OF "MARIE ANTOINETTE," SHOWING THE +SIMPLICITY OF ADORNMENT SHE AFFECTED. + +"MECHLIN" LACE.] + + + + +VIII + +THE MODERN BRUSSELS LACES AND MECHLIN + + Modern Brussels, Point Gaze--Ghent--Duchesse Point--Mechlin + (the Queen of Laces). + + +Magnificent laces are still made at Brussels, but almost wholly on a +machine-made ground, the workers and merchants apparently finding the +old hand-made ground unprofitable. The machine-made ground is cheap, and +often of mixed flax and cotton instead of being of purely Flanders flax +thread, as in the old days. Both quality and colour suffer from this +admixture, the lace washing badly and wearing worse. + +The most common lace is the Point Applique, in which the sprays, groups, +and borders on the design are made separately by hand on the pillow, and +are afterwards applied by tiny stitchings to the machine-made net. Some +qualities are better than others. In the better class the sprays are +appliqued to the net, which is then cut away and the interstices of the +design filled in with hand-made modes and brides, making a very pretty +and showy lace. The best lace made in Brussels now is + + +_Point Gaze_, + +in which the finest modern lace is produced. Its chief characteristics +are its superb designs, repeating many of the fine Renaissance patterns, +its clear ground, and its use of shading in leaves and flowers, which, +while it adds much to the sumptuous effect, is possibly too +naturalistic. This lace is a mixture of hand and machine lace, the +ground being of the best machine net, the flowers and sprays frequently +needle made, the various fillings being composed of a variety of +designs, and the shading often being produced in the needle-darning as +in modern Ghent and Limerick. Point de Gaze is costly, but it has the +reputation of appearing "worth its money" to which few other laces of +the present day can aspire. + +Other lace-making towns in Belgium and Flanders are-- + + +_Ghent_, + +which produces a fine machine-made net, worked and embroidered in exact +imitation of the earliest Limerick lace. So _real_ is this imitation +that a fine flounce of 4 yds. 32 in. wide was sold at a London +auction-room a few months ago, as "real old Limerick," for L60! + +Ghent executes vast quantities of hand-made imitations of Valenciennes, +a good and durable lace, but much more expensive than the machine-made +varieties which flood the shops as "real Val." + +[Illustration: MECHLIN LAPPET. + +Eighteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Perhaps the only other lace worth mentioning in smaller and later +varieties is that known as "Duchesse point" or "Bruges," which while +being a showy, decorative, and cheap lace, is anything but satisfactory +either in design, manufacture, or wear. It is largely composed of +cotton, is heavy and cumbrous in design, and after washing becomes thick +and clumsy. It is pillow-made, the flowers being made on the cushion and +afterwards united by coarse and few brides. + +Almost equal in favour with old Brussels lace was + + +MECHLIN, + +which was aptly termed "the Queen of Laces." Old Mechlin was wondrously +fine, and transparent. It is often spoken of as "Point de Malines" +which, of course, is entirely wrong, as it is not Point at all--being +made entirely, all at one time, or in one piece, on the pillow. Much of +the lace known under the general name of Flemish Point is really Malines +or Mechlin, the only difference being the fine silvery thread which runs +all through the designs of real Mechlin. The earliest date of the +manufacture of Mechlin is unknown, but in 1681, it is recorded, that the +people of Malines busied themselves with making a white lace known as +Mechlin. It became a fashionable lace in England in 1699, Queen Mary +using it considerably and Queen Anne buying it largely, in one instance +purchasing 83 yards of it for L247. + +It has always remained a favourite lace with English royalties, Queen +Charlotte almost exclusively using it. The other day I discovered in a +bric-a-brac shop about twenty yards of it, old and discoloured, it is +true, which came directly from Queen Caroline, the ill-used wife of +George IV. In the earlier Mechlin, although pillow-made, the +introduction of the "brides with picots," and also the may-flower +patterns of Brussels, helped to make it more decorative. The ground or +reseau was very similar to Brussels hand-made, but the hexagonal mesh is +shorter, as reference to the diagram of reseaux will show. + +The exquisite "lightness" of Mechlin, so specially adapted to +"quillings" and "pleatings," accounted for its popularity. It was +specially suitable to the lawns and muslins of the eighteenth century, +but little of this lace is left owing, no doubt, to its great favour +except the ubiquitous "lappets," for which it was no doubt "the Queen of +Lace." + +The immediate cause of its extinction was the introduction of Blonde +laces, and later its final overthrow came from its being the easiest +lace to reproduce by machinery. + +[Illustration: MARIE ANTOINETTE, QUEEN OF LOUIS XVI., SHOWING HOW +MECHLIN LACE WAS USED. + +From an old fashion plate.] + + + + +IX + +OTHER CONTINENTAL LACES + + + + +IX + +OTHER CONTINENTAL LACES + + Spanish lace; Gold and silver laces of Spain--German + laces--Russian laces--Maltese silk and thread laces. + + +Outside the great lace-making countries of Italy, France, and Flanders, +little lace was ever made, and that little of less consequence. + + +_Spanish Lace._ + +Much of the old lace known as "Spanish Point" is not Spanish at all, but +the best of Italian Rose Point on a large scale, being the variety known +as Gros Point. It was not extensively used for dress purposes, as +contemporary portraits show, but Spain being such an ultra-Romanist +country, vast quantities of it were imported into Spain for church use. +When Spain fell on unhappy days, in 1830, and the religious houses were +dissolved, this lace was eagerly bought by connoisseurs and collectors +and became known as Spanish Point. It is not unlikely that the Italian +lace was copied by the nuns of the Spanish convents; indeed, at South +Kensington Museum there is a set of church altar lace which is +admittedly Spanish work and is a distinct but far off imitation of +Italian Point. + +Spain made gold and silver laces of fine quality and gorgeous design. +Blonde laces in both cream and black are almost indigenous to the soil, +and a particular kind of black Blonde, embroidered with colours, +specially appealed to the colour-loving people. + + +_German Laces._ + +Perhaps at the present day more lace is made in Germany than at any +other period. An enormous manufacture of good machine-made lace is +exported yearly, the variety known as Saxony being both popular and +cheap. + +Germany has no national lace, the clever _hausfraus_ caring more to +decorate their table and bed-linen than their persons, and using the +substantial and practical embroideries of the cross-stitch patterns more +than the elegant frailties of lace trimming. Lacis network darned into +patterns has always been popular here, as also in Denmark, Sweden, and +Norway. + +[Illustration: DUCHESSE LACE. + +Modern.] + + +_Russia._ + +The Russian laces need little more than a passing note. As in Germany, +Lacis and Cutworke form the only hand-made lace known, the people +contenting themselves with these varieties and using coloured threads to +further decorate them. Their laces may be called merely Russian +embroideries. Peter the Great did much to found a lace school, but +only gold laces were made, of a barbaric character. Recently an attempt +has been made to imitate the Venetian laces, with very fair results, but +the character is very stiff and mechanical, going back to the primitive +forms of Reticella rather than the elegancies of Italian Point. + +The only other Continental lace requiring note is + + +_Maltese_, + +a lace made entirely with bobbins and on a pillow. This lace is of +ancient make, being known as early as the old Greek laces, which it +strongly resembles. Its very popularity has killed its use as a fine +lace, and at the present day it is copied as a cheap useful lace in +France, England, Ireland, and even India. The old Maltese lace was made +of the finest flax thread, afterwards a silk variety, which is well +known, being made in cream. Black lace was also manufactured, and at the +time of the popularity of black lace as a dress trimming it was much +used. At the present day the lace is not of the old quality, cotton +being frequently mixed with the flax threads. There is no demand for it, +and it is about the most unsaleable lace of the day. + + + + +X + +A SHORT HISTORY OF LACE IN ENGLAND + + +[Illustration: QUEEN ELIZABETH: RUFF OF VENETIAN POINT. + +(_National Portrait Gallery._)] + + + + +X + +A SHORT HISTORY OF LACE IN ENGLAND + + Early samplers--Lace worn by Queen Elizabeth; by the early + Stuarts--Extravagant use of lace in time of Charles + II.--William and Mary's lace bill. + + +Even at the risk of being considered utterly unpatriotic, I cannot give +much more than faint praise to the lace-making of England up to the +present date, when notable efforts are at last being made to raise the +poor imitation of the Continental schools to something more in +accordance with artistic conception of what a great National Art might +become. + +As in all countries, lace-making apparently commenced in its early +English stages by drawn-thread and cutwork. In many of the charming old +sixteenth-century English samplers just as exquisite cut-work, and its +natural successor Reticella, or "punto in aria" is shown, as in the +finest examples of the Venetian schools. Unfortunately, however, English +fine lace-making came to a sudden and inexplicable end, although we know +that any quantity of fine Venetian, exquisite Brussels, or Flemish +laces, and the wonderful Point de France were being imported into the +country and lavishly used. + +As early as the reign of Edward IV. lace was mentioned as being +prohibited for importation amongst other items of feminine luxury, such +as "ribans, fringes of silk and cotton," but it is considered that the +word "laces" here means only the twisted threads that go to make up a +lace or tie, commonly ending in tags or points. It must be allowed, +however, that laces, or more probably "gimps" of gold and silver threads +were used for trimming both lay and ecclesiastical garments, and in +Henry VII.'s reign we find that importation of Venetian lace was +permitted, but this is generally admitted still to refer to gold and +silver lace, more probably coming from Genoa. + +It was not really until the time of bluff King Hal that lace became an +article of fashion, when during the life of the last of his unfortunate +queens he permits "the importation of all manner of gold and silver +fringes, or _otherwise_, with all new 'gentillesses' of what facyion or +value, for the pleasure of our dearest wyeff the Queen." + +Henry himself also began to indulge in all these little elegances of +fashion, and wore his sleeves embroidered with cutwork, and +handkerchiefs edged with gold and silver, treating himself liberally to +"coverpanes" and "shaving-cloths" trimmed with gold lace. + +[Illustration: EDMUND SPENSER: COLLAR TRIMMED WITH RETICELLA. + +Early period.] + +Little mention of white work was made in the inventories of Henry VIII. +or his Queens, but Cardinal Wolsey seems to have had more than his +share of cutwork embroideries, judging from contemporary portraits. + +In Queen Mary's reign white work began to be more frequently spoken of, +and in 1556 it is stated that Lady Jane Seymour presented the Queen with +"a smock of fair white work, Flanders making." + +It was not until Queen Elizabeth's time that lace became freely +mentioned; then suddenly we are introduced to an endless variety of lace +and trimmings, both of gold and silver, pearl and embroideries, and +various white work! In some of the old Chronicles mention was made of +drawn work, cut-work, Crown lace, bone lace for ruffs, Spanish chain, +parchment, hollow, and diamond lace. Many of these terms cannot be +understood. + +The enormous ruffs worn by Queen Elizabeth were introduced into England +in the time of her sister Mary. Portraits both of Philip of Spain and +Queen Mary show ruffs, but not edged with lace. Queen Elizabeth's, on +the contrary, are both edged with lace and, in some instances, covered +with it. On her poor old effigy at Westminster Abbey, where her waxen +image is dressed in her actual garments, the only lace that appears is +on the enormous ruff, three-quarters of a yard wide, covered with a fine +lace of the loose network kind. The rest of her garments are trimmed +with gold and silver lace and _passementerie_. + +In the succeeding reign lace of a geometric design shows itself on the +ruffs of the richest people. Pictures in the National Portrait Gallery +show many exquisite examples of the beautiful Reticella of Venice, which +must have been very costly to the purchaser, as twenty-five yards or +more of this fine lace were required to edge a ruff. + +It was in the reign of James I. and his consort, Anne of Denmark, that +Flanders lace and the expensive Point laces of Italy first became widely +popular. Then, as now, they were costly--to such an extent that many +gentlemen sold an estate to buy laces for their adornment. + +It was during this reign that we first learn of a lace being made in +England, as Queen Anne of Denmark on her journey south purchased lace at +_Winchester_ and _Basing_, but history mentions not what kind of lace it +was. Apparently only a simple kind of edging was used, made on a pillow. + +The enormous ruffs went out of fashion with the death of James I. +Charles I., in all his portraits, wears the falling collar edged with +Vandyke lace. It was during this reign that Venetian lace reached its +apotheosis in England. The dress of the day has never been surpassed, +though it became much more elaborate and ostentatious in the time of +Charles II. and William and Mary. Falling collars were specially adapted +to the display of the handsome laces of Venice. The cuffs of the sleeves +were likewise trimmed with the same; scarves were worn across the +breast, trimmed with the narrower Reticella. + +[Illustration: SEVENTEENTH CENTURY FALLING COLLAR TRIMMED WITH FINE +RETICELLA. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +During the Commonwealth the laces of Venice suffered a temporary +eclipse, and the plainer laces of Flanders were freely used. Cromwell +himself, it is said, did not disdain the use of it. His effigy at +Westminster was dressed in a fine Holland lace-trimmed shirt, with bands +and cuffs of the same. This effigy, by the way, was destroyed at the +Restoration. + +Charles II., who during his exile in France had become imbued with the +extravagant taste of the French Court, gave vast orders for "Points of +Venice and Flanders," on the plea of providing English lace-workers with +better patterns and ideas. + +The falling collar certainly went out of fashion, but lace was liberally +used on other parts of the dress. Lace frills of costly Point edged the +knee-breeches, lace cravats were worn and deep falling cuffs. Charles +II., in the last year of his reign, spent L20 for a new cravat for his +brother's birthday. + +During James II.'s reign extravagance in lace purchases are still +mentioned, but it surely reached its culmination in the joint reign of +William and Mary, when enormous sums were spent by both King and Queen. +In one year Queen Mary's lace bill amounted to L1,918. New methods of +using lace were fashioned. A huge head-dress called the "Fontange," with +upright standing ends of Venetian Point, double hanging ruffles falling +from elbow sleeves, lace-trimmed aprons, lace tuckers, characterised the +feminine dress of the day, while the "Steinkirk" cravat and falling +cuffs of William III.'s day ran up accounts not much less than that of +his Queen. In 1690 his bill was L1,603, and in 1695 it amounted to +L2,459! + +The effigies of William and Mary in the Abbey, wear the very finest +Venetian Point laces. None of the other figures wear such costly lace, +nor in such profusion. + +[Illustration: COLLAR IN GROS POINT DE VENISE. + +Louis XIV. period. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +XI + +ENGLISH LACES + + + + +XI + +ENGLISH LACES + + Queen Anne and Mechlin--Establishment of lace-making in + Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire--Buckingham lace--Wiltshire + lace--Devonshire lace--Modern Honiton revival. + + +It was in Queen Anne's time that the earliest really good lace +manufactured in England appeared. Driven from France by the edict of +Louis XIV., the refugees found a home in England, and encouraged by +Queen Anne's fondness for laces other than Venetian, they made and +taught the English lace-workers, among whom they settled, the art of +real lace-making, which up to this time had apparently been only half +understood. Numerous lace schools now sprang up, the counties of +Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Northampton specially becoming known. +Valenciennes and Mechlin were the varieties of laces principally copied; +a very pretty lace, very reminiscent of Mechlin, being the "Baby lace," +which received its name from being so much used to trim babies' caps. +Although very much like Valenciennes and Mechlin, the laces were much +coarser both in thread and design than their prototypes. Bedfordshire +and Northamptonshire did not long retain the art of lace-making, but +Buckingham lace remained a staple manufacture, and is much esteemed even +to-day, many connoisseurs considering it far better as a lace than the +somewhat clumsy laces of Devonshire. The specimen shown is a piece of +old Buckingham lace closely copying the reseau and sprigs of Lille which +most lace-lovers consider it excels. The net of Buckinghamshire is an +exact copy of the Lille mesh, being made of two threads twisted in a +diamond pattern, the sprays being worked on the pillow at the same time. +The patterns of the old Buckingham lace are not very varied, the best +known being what is called "Spider lace," a coarse kind of open mesh +being worked in the pattern. The principal town engaged in the +eighteenth century was Newport Pagnel, which was cited as being most +noted for making Bobbin lace. Old Brussels designs were used, and some +quaint lace of early Flemish design, was made. The early English run +lace, which was even so late as fifty years ago very popular, was mostly +made here. Aylesbury, Buckingham, and High Wycombe also made lace, and +in the last-named old town cottage lace-making may be seen to this day. +Very quaint are the old lace bobbins that may be purchased in the +"antique" shops of these lace-making towns. The lace-workers apparently +indulged many a pretty fancy in shaping them in a diversity of ways, +very few bobbins being alike. Some were made of bone, really prettily +turned, with dotted and pierced patterns on them. Others were +silver-studded, and again others were banded in silver. The wooden ones +were always decorated, if possible, each one differently from the +others, so that the worker might distinguish each thread without looking +at it. Nearly every bobbin was ended with a bunch of coloured beads +strung on wire, and a collection of these bobbins, with their "gingles," +often yields up a pretty and quaint necklace. One in my possession has a +quaint bead made of "ancient Roman glass," worth at least ten shillings. +One wonders how this bit of Roman magnificence had strayed into an +English cottage home! + +[Illustration: "OLD BUCKINGHAM." + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +[Illustration: EARLY DEVONSHIRE LACE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +Buckinghamshire is the only one of the Midland counties which has +produced _wide_ lace; the adjoining counties confined themselves to +edgings at most some 6 inches wide. A flounce in my collection measures +21 inches, and is of very elegant design, and of fine quality. In +Wiltshire lace appears to have been made at an early date in the +eighteenth century, but little lace is left to show its quality. A +curious piece is said to belong to an old family in Dorset, who vouch +for the lace having belonged to Queen Charlotte, the wife of George III. +Like many other traditional "antiques," this is undoubtedly a fairy +story, as it claims to have been made in commemoration of the defeat of +the Spanish Armada, _at contemporary times_. It is exceedingly handsome, +showing one of Philip's ships, very suggestively surrounded by big sea +fish and apparently resting on the rocky bottom of the ocean. In the +next panel Tilbury Fort is portrayed, and another ship, one of England's +glory, proudly rules the waves. The design is undoubtedly English, and +most probably it was made in commemoration of the historic event--but +the lace is Point d'Argentan, and was most likely manufactured specially +for Queen Charlotte. + +Lyme Regis at one time rivalled Honiton, the laces of both towns being +equally prized. Queen Charlotte wore a "head and lappets" made here when +she first came to England, and afterwards she ordered a splendid lace +dress to be made. When, however, Queen Victoria, in her wish to +encourage the English makers, sent an order for her marriage lace, not +sufficient workers were found to produce it. + + +DEVONSHIRE LACE. + +As early as 1614 the lace-makers of Devonshire were known. The influx of +refugees from Flanders in the Midlands and southern counties undoubtedly +established lace-making in both parts of the kingdom. Many of the +Honiton lace-workers married these refugees, and to this day the people +are of mixed descent. Quaint names of Flemish extraction appear over the +shop doors. + +In the early days both men, women, and children seem to have pursued the +art of lace-making, boys learning and working at it until the age of +sixteen, when they were either apprenticed to some trade or went to +sea. + +[Illustration: OLD HONITON (NEEDLEPOINT GROUND).] + +[Illustration: OLD HONITON. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +Most of the old Devonshire laces bear distinct likeness to the fine +Flemish lace, only the clumsiness of the design or the coarse +workmanship differentiating them. It has, however, one special feature +which gave it the name "Trolly lace," as, unlike the perfectly flat lace +of Flanders, it has a coarse thread or "trolly" outlining its patterns, +and being made of English thread, it was coarse and not very durable. + + +_Honiton_ + +has always easily ranked first amongst our British laces, although by +many not considered equal to fine Bucks. Like the Midland lace, it has +been always made with Flanders thread, and therefore has maintained its +popularity because of its _wear_ and its _colour_. The early Honiton +workers copied "Brussels" lace, but because of their inability to +produce an artistic design it has never been anything but a _poor_ copy. +Even when the Brussels influence was most direct the flowers and sprays +were placed inartistically, while the scroll copies of the early Flemish +schools can only be termed the imitative handiwork of a child. + +The most prized specimens of old Honiton are those with hand-made +ground, made of Flanders flax. Very little of this real ground Honiton +lace is left. Queen Victoria did much to make Honiton lace _the_ lace of +the land; but although a regular trade has been established, and much +good work accomplished, Honiton of the past will never be regarded on +the same plane as the laces of Venice, France, and Brussels. Even in its +best variety it lacks the exquisite filmy touch of Brussels, the dainty +grace of Alencon, and the magnificence of Point de France and Venetian +Point. The Honiton laces made since the introduction of machine-made net +is especially poor. Flower sprigs and sprays are made separately on the +pillow, and afterwards applied to the machine-made ground. These are, as +a rule, flowers and foliage treated naturalistically, and are heavy and +close in design. These are often very sparingly applied over a wide +expanse of net in order to make as much lace with as little trouble as +possible. This is very different to the work of the old Honiton +lace-worker, who made every inch of it herself--first the sprays and +scrolls, then worked the ground round it, and received, it is said, from +the middleman (who purchased it for the town market) as many shillings +as would cover the lace offered for sale. + +We are glad to say, however, that very praiseworthy efforts are being +made to introduce better methods and more artistic designs in the many +lace schools which are being formed in various parts of Devon. Mrs. +Fowler, of Honiton, one of the oldest lace-makers in this centre, making +exquisite lace, the technique leaving nothing to be desired, and also +showing praiseworthy effort in shaking off the trammels of the +traditional designs. + +[Illustration: MODERN HONITON, MADE BY MRS. FOWLER.] + + + + +XII + +SCOTCH AND IRISH LACES + + + + +XII + +SCOTCH AND IRISH LACES + + Hamilton lace--Mary Queen of Scots--Modern lace-making in + Ireland--Limerick lace--Carrick-ma-cross--Irish + crotchet--Convent laces. + + +Scotch lace can hardly be said to exist. At one time a coarse kind of +network lace called "Hamilton lace" was made, and considerable money was +obtained by it, but it never had a fashion, and deservedly so. Since the +introduction of machinery, however, there has been considerable trade, +and a tambour lace is made for flounces, scarfs, &c. The more artistic +class of work made by Scotswomen is that of embroidering fine muslin, +and some really exquisite work is made by the common people in their +homes. + +Much mention is often made of Mary Queen of Scots and her embroideries +and laces. It must be remembered that she married firstly the Dauphin of +France, and while at the French Court imbibed the taste for elegant +apparel and costly lace trimmings. There is no record that she ever wore +lace of her own country's manufacture, and, although English writers +often quote the lace made by her fair hands, really the needlework made +by Queen Mary at Fotheringay was embroidery. + + +_Irish Laces._ + +The early lace of Ireland was the usual cut and drawn work, and it was +not until the earlier part of the nineteenth century that lace-making +actually became a craft. In the eighteenth century many brave attempts +were made to commence lace schools, and the best work was done in the +convents, where really fine work was executed by the nuns, the patterns +having been sent from Italy. It was not until 1829 that the manufacture +of Limerick lace was first instituted. This really is not lace at all, +as it is merely chain-stitch worked in patterns on machine-made net. + +This pretty so-called lace was first made at Limerick by an Oxford man, +who established a school there, taking with him twenty-four girls as +teachers. It quickly became very popular, in the early "fifties" every +woman of either high or low degree possessing herself of at least a lace +collar or fichu of Limerick lace. + +In 1855 more than 1,500 workers were employed, but decidedly the best +lace of the manufacture belongs to the time prior to this date. The +quality of the net ground has also deteriorated, or perhaps the best net +has not been purchased. + +[Illustration: LIMERICK "FILLINGS."] + +Very dainty little sprays and flowers are produced in the fine chain or +tambour stitch, the hearts of the flowers or the centres of the scallops +being worked over in an endless variety of extra stitches, as will be +seen in the illustration. + +Another variety of lace is Carrick-ma-cross, which was contemporary with +Limerick. This is merely embroidery again, but has more claim to the +title of lace, as the tiny little flowers and scrolls are connected with +brides made of buttonhole stitch ornamented with picots. This is really +a very handsome lace, its only drawback being that it will not _wash_. +The fine lawn of which it is made is buttonholed round and then cut +away. This, in cleaning or washing, _contracts_ and leaves the +buttonhole edging, and in a few cleanings it is a mass of unmendable +rags. + +Slightly more serviceable is another variety of Carrick-ma-cross, on +which the lawn is appliqued to a machine-made net, the pattern outlined +with buttonhole stitches, and the surplus lawn cut away, leaving the +network as a grounding, various pretty stitchings filling up the +necessary spaces. + +Yet another kind of lace is made, and is really the only real lace that +Ireland can claim. This is the Irish crotchet, which in its finer +varieties is a close imitation of Venetian Point, but made with fine +thread and with a crotchet needle. Some of the best is really worth +purchasing, but it is costly, realising as much as five guineas per +yard. A very delicate "Tatting" also comes from the Emerald Isle, and in +comparing English and Irish laces one is inevitably struck with the +reflection that there is more "artistry" in the production of Irish +laces and embroidery than in England with all her advantages. The +temperamental differences of the two races are distinctly shown in this, +perhaps more than any other art. + +Much really notable work is now being executed in the Irish lace +schools. At Youghal, co. Monaghan, an exact replica of old Venetian +Point is being worked. Various fine specimens from the school occupy a +place at South Kensington Museum, and the lace industry of Ireland may +be said to be in a healthy condition. + +[Illustration: CARRICK-MA-CROSS LACE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XIII + +HOW TO IDENTIFY LACE + + +[Illustration: THE CENTRE STRIP IS OLD "RETICELLA," WITH GENOA BORDERS. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XIII + +HOW TO IDENTIFY LACE + + Style--Historical data--Reseaux. + + +The great difficulty in attempting to identify any specimen of lace is +that from time to time each country experimented in the manners and +styles of other lace-making nations. The early Reticella workers copied +what is known as the "Greek laces," which were found in the islands of +the Grecian Archipelago. Specimens of these laces found in the +excavations of the last thirty years show practically no difference in +method and style. France copied the Venetian laces, and at one period it +is impossible to say whether a given specimen was made at Alencon or +Venice. Italy, in turn, imitated the Flemish laces--to such an extent +that even the authorities at South Kensington Museum, with all their +leisure and opportunities for study and the magnificent specimens at +hand for identification, admit that certain laces are either "Italian or +Flemish." Valenciennes was once a Flemish town, and though now French, +preserves the Flemish character of lace, some specimens of Mechlin +being so like Valenciennes as to baffle certainty. + +Later, Brussels borrowed the hand-made grounds of France and Venice, and +still later England copied Brussels, the guipures of Flanders, and the +ground and style of Lille! All this makes the initial stages of the +study of lace almost a hopeless quest. The various expensive volumes on +lace, although splendidly written and gorgeously illustrated, leave the +student with little more than an interesting and historical knowledge on +which to base the actual study of lace. Here I may refer my readers to +the one and only public collection of lace, I believe, in England--that +of the South Kensington Museum, where specimens of lace from all +countries and of all periods are shown, and where many magnificent +bequests, that of Mrs. Bolckow especially, make the actual study of lace +a possibility. + +It is to be hoped that the governing body of the museum will, in its own +good time, make this a pleasure instead of a pain. The specimens, the +_most important to the student_, are placed in a low, dark corridor. Not +a glimmer of light can be obtained on some of the cases, which also are +upright, and placed so closely together that on attempting to see the +topmost specimen on one side the unfortunate student literally bangs her +head into the glass of the next one. A gentle complaint at the +Directors' office concerning the difficulty brought forth the +astonishing information that there was no room at their disposal, but +that in good time better light might be found. As these cases have +been in identically the same place for the past fifteen years, one hopes +that the "good time" may come before one becomes a "spectacled +pantaloon" with no desire to see the wonders of that Palace of Art. + +[Illustration: POINT D'ANGLETERRE. + +Style Louis XV. Eighteenth Century + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +This little protest is made in the hope that the "Lords of the +Committee" may possibly have their attention drawn to what amongst the +lace-lovers and students in this country is a "standing grievance." + +It is almost impossible, even from the best of photographic +illustrations, to learn all the intricacies of identification. The +photographs clearly show style, but it needs specimens of the actual +lace to show method of working. From the illustrations in this book, +specially selected from the South Kensington Collection, and from +specimens in my own collection, every variety of style may be easily +understood, as they have been particularly selected to show each point +of difference. Commencing with the earliest form of lacework--_i.e._, +"cutworke"--nothing will better show this than the "Sampler" specimen, +which, half way down, shows two rows entirely typical of this kind of +early lace-making--for such it is. A little lower, examples of drawn +threadwork are seen, while the upper portion illustrates satin stitch +patterns, which more properly belong to embroidery. + +The ancient collar from the South Kensington Collection, page 149, shows +some of the finest developments of cutwork, when the foundation of linen +was entirely dispensed with. The work is exceedingly fine, the threads +being no coarser, indeed in many cases less so, than the fine linen it +adorns. This is known as Reticella, or "punto in aria." The last name +is applicable to all the laces of Venice which succeeded Reticella, and +means lace literally made out of nothing or without any building +foundation. + +The specimen is still of the same class, but where before the design was +simple geometric square and pointed as in all the early lace, it now +takes on the lovely flowing scroll of the Renaissance that marks the +latter half of the seventeenth century. + +The same grand styles may be noted all through the great period of +Italian Needlepoint lace. It will be seen in a lesser degree in the +Guipure laces of Milan and Genoa, but here the cramping influence of the +Flemish school shows itself distinctly. + +[Illustration: ITALIAN ECCLESIASTICAL LACE.] + +[Illustration: FLEMISH OR GENOESE ECCLESIASTICAL LACE. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +The same bold lines may be noted in the early Needlepoint lace of +France, which had not then become sufficiently sure of her capacity to +develop a style of her own, and all show the Renaissance spirit. +Afterwards when the superb Point de France was at its height of +manufacture along with grand outline and exquisite handicraft, the +influence of the mighty monarch Louis XIV. asserted itself and although +the lace itself commands unbounded admiration, fantastic little notions, +symbolical and naturalistic, showed itself--as an illustration page 75: +little figures representing "the Indian," "canopied crown over a sealed +lady," trees growing all manner of bizarre fruit and flowers, all +symbolical of Louis the Magnificent's unbounded power and sway. In the +South Kensington Museum there is a still finer specimen, which has +not yet been photographed, I believe--a magnificent flounce, about +eighteen inches wide (really two boot top pieces joined), of what is +known as pseudo-Oriental character, which shows amongst the usual +exquisite scrolling no less than seven different figures on each +piece--viz., an Indian, a violinist in dress of Louis XIV. period, a +lady riding on a bird, two other ladies, one with a pet dog and the +other a parrot, a lady violinist, and another lady seated before a +toilet-table. These little figures are not more than three-quarters of +an inch high, but are worked with such minuteness that even the tiny +features are shown. This fantastic adoption of the human figure was +copied in Italy and Flanders. The finest specimens of Point d'Angleterre +(Brussels) show the same designs; and it may broadly be stated that all +lace with figures is of the Louis XIV. period, and over two hundred +years old. + +Succeeding this period came the dainty elegance of the French laces, +when the workers of Alencon and Argentan had developed a purely French +style. Note the Point d'Alencon, illustration page 83, where the +characteristics of the period are fully shown. The illustration shows a +mixed lace, which only recently has been acknowledged by the South +Kensington people as Point d'Argentan. Along with the typical Argentan +ground of the upper portion is the fine Alencon mesh and varied jours of +the border. This also is Louis XIV. style. The lappet shown next is +exceedingly instructive, as till quite lately the people who professed +to understand lace agreed to call this Genoese, although it was quite +unlike anything else made there. This lappet was so labelled at South +Kensington, but now is admittedly Argentella (or little Argentan). It is +remarkably like Alencon, being of the same period, the only points of +difference being that the design is not outlined with a raised Cordonnet +(though in different places of the design a raised and purled Cordonnet +is often stitched on it) and the special ground (partridge eye) which is +agreed to denote "Argentella" lace--page 83. It is sometimes called the +may-flower ground, but this is somewhat misleading as that design occurs +in other laces. The only other great style is that of Flanders, which at +its earliest period had received no influence from the Renaissance that +had seized the southern countries of Europe and was still in the grip of +mediaeval art. It was not until Italian influence permeated France that +Flemish lace perceptibly altered in character. + +These are to all intents and purposes the three great styles of lace. +England had no style: she copied Flemish, Brussels, and Mechlin laces. +Ireland, on the contrary, copied Italian in her Irish crotchet and +Carrick-ma-cross (in style only, but not workmanship), and adapted Lille +and Mechlin and Brussels and Buckingham in her Limerick lace. + +The student must next make herself familiar with the methods pursued by +the old lace-workers, and here the difficulty commences. All lace is +either Needlepoint, pillow-made, or machine-made. _Needlepoint_ explains +itself. Every thread of it is made with a needle on a parchment pattern, +and only two stitches are used, buttonhole and a double-loop which is +really a buttonhole stitch. + +[Illustration: BRUSSELS LAPPET. + +Nineteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +This can be clearly understood by referring to Charts Nos. I. and II., +where the _two Brussels grounds_ are shown. The Needlepoint ground, No. +I., is formed by a buttonhole stitch, which loops over again before +taking the next. The pillow-made ground, No. II., shows the threads +plaited or twisted together to form a hexagonal or a diamond-shaped +network. This is all the difference between needle-made and pillow-made +lace, and in itself helps to identify in many instances its country and +period when it was produced. All the early Italian laces were +Needlepoint, and all the early French laces were the same. All the +Flemish laces (including Brussels) were pillow-made, and mixed laces in +any of these countries are of later make. Italy adapted the Flemish +pillow-lace, and produced Genoese and Milanese guipures, in addition to +the coarse imitation of Reticella which she now made by plaiting threads +on the pillow. Brussels adopted the needle-made motifs and grounds of +Italy, and produced perhaps her finest lace, weaving her beautiful +designs and outlines on the pillow, and afterwards filling the spaces +with needle-made jours and brides, as in Point d'Angleterre. + +A study of Chart II. will show the different style of grounds or reseaux +of both Needlepoint and pillow-made lace, the buttonhole grounds being +either of "brides" with or without picots, or buttonhole loops, as in +Brussels, and Alencon (with a straight thread whipping across to +strengthen the ground), loops buttonholed over all as in Argentan, or +made of tiny worked hexagons with separate buttonholed threads around +them as in Argentella. The pillow-made grounds are made of two plaited +or twisted threads, except in the case of Valenciennes, when it is made +of four threads throughout (hence its durability). In Brussels, it will +be noted, the threads are twisted twice to commence the mesh. These meet +two other threads, and are plaited four times, dividing into two again, +and performing the same twist, the whole making a hexagon rather longer +than round. Mechlin has precisely the same ground, only that the threads +are plaited _twice_ instead of four times, as in Brussels, making the +hexagon roundish instead of long. + +The ground of Lille lace is of exactly the same shape as Valenciennes, +but is composed of two threads twisted loosely twice each side of the +diamond, and that of Valenciennes being made of four threads plaited. + +With the aid of these little charts, a remembrance of the various styles +and a few actual specimens of lace, and _a powerful magnifying glass_, +it is not beyond the power of any reader of this little book to become +expert in the identification of old lace. + +[Illustration: REAL "POINT DE GAZE" (NEEDLE-MADE GROUND). + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XIV + +SALE PRICES + + + + +XIV + +SALE PRICES + + +Lace is such an article of luxury, and, as a rule, only belonging to the +wealthiest class, that it seldom or ever comes into the open market. In +1907 two collections were dispersed at Christie's--those of Mrs. +Massey-Mainwaring and Mrs. Lewis Hill. + +The most costly laces are the Venetian Points, some of the fine Rose +Points being priceless. It is so fragile that little of it remains, and +the smallest piece is eagerly snapped up by collectors. + + +In 1904 at Christie's lace sold for the following prices-- + + L +A 58-inch length of 24-ins. deep Point de Venise 600 + +A 4-yards length of Rose Point, 11 inches deep 420 + + +The same year-- + + L +4 yards of Point d'Argentan, 25 inches deep 460 + +44 inches Point d'Alencon, 17 inches deep 43 + +2-1/2 yards Point d'Alencon, 14 inches deep 46 + + +In 1907, March 11, _Massey-Mainwaring Sale_ at Christie's-- + + sold for + L s. d. +1-1/2 yards Venetian Gros Point, 8 inches deep 16 16 0 + +5 yards length of Reticella, 7-1/2 inches +deep 33 12 0 + +4 short lengths 42 0 0 + +7 pieces of Point d'Alencon 21 0 0 + +4 yards narrow Point d'Argentan 15 15 0 + +3 pairs Point d'Argentan lappets 15 15 0 + +30 yards narrow Mechlin in odd lengths 21 0 0 + + +April 15th, the _Lewis-Hill Sale_ at Christie's:-- + + sold for + L s. d. +4 yards Venetian Point, 15-1/2 inches deep 68 5 0 + +4 " " " 8-1/2 " " 52 10 0 + +3 yards Spanish Point, 6-1/2 inches deep 73 10 0 + +An Old Brussels scarf in two pieces 10 10 0 + +6 yards Brussels applique 23 10 0 + +A Point Gaze parasol-cover 6 16 0 + +A Brussels flounce 12 1 6 + +3 yards Honiton flounce, 17 inches deep 69 6 0 + +Another similar 69 6 0 + +6 yards Honiton lace in three pieces 24 3 0 + +An old lace coverlet 25 4 0 + +Another ditto 26 5 0 + +A lace altar-frontal 21 1 0 + +With the exception of the Honiton flounces, which sold beyond their +market value, all the above pieces were bought by London lace dealers! + +The famous collection of the late Mrs. Hailstone was sold in 1909. This +lady had for many years been known as a lace collector, and the sale of +her effects was eagerly anticipated. The result was extremely +interesting to the collectors, as Mrs. Hailstone had collected specimen +lengths of almost every known lace. No huge prices obtained, but the +sale may be regarded as representative, and the prices quoted as being +open-market value. + + L s. d. +A set of bed-hangings, forming six curtains, +made of Italian lace and linen 40 0 0 + +A large portiere curtain of Italian lacis-work 10 10 0 + +A Point d'Alencon fichu 30 0 0 + +" " " cravat end, a pair of sleeves, +one odd piece 18 0 0 + +A pair of Argentan lappets and six yards lace 12 0 0 + +A panel fine raised Venetian Point, 22 inches +wide, 28 inches long 24 0 0 + +A Berthe, Point de Venise, 1 yard 120 inches, +12 inches deep 25 0 0 + +A Point de Venise Berthe 36 0 0 + +A 1 yard 13 inches x 7 inches panel Venetian lace 50 0 0 + +Two specimen pieces, 3-1/4 inches, all of +Point de Venise a reseau 14 10 0 + +A Buckinghamshire collar, sleeves, and pieces 5 5 0 + +A specimen of old Honiton, baby's cap, bodice, +and handkerchief 3 5 0 + +An old Honiton baby's robe, said to have belonged +to Princess Charlotte 15 10 0 + +Seven volumes of lace specimens of old and modern +lace 35 0 0 + +In December, 1910, probably the most valuable collection ever placed +upon the market was dispersed at Messrs. Christie's. The late Sir +William Abdy Bt., had for many years devoted his time and money to the +collection of valuable lace, such as now can only be seen in the great +national collections. The prices obtained are significant of the huge +sums which must be paid to obtain wearable pieces of valuable lace such +as skirt lengths, 3- or 4-yard lengths of deep flouncings, shawls, +coverlets, aprons, &c. + + L s. d. + +A fine Point d'Alencon skirt, 2-1/2 yards, +44 inches deep 160 0 0 + +A fine Point d'Alencon scarf, 2 yards +9 inches x 10 inches deep 72 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan Berthe, 9-1/2 inches deep 39 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 6 yards 30 +inches x 5-1/2 inches deep 140 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 2 yards 26 +inches long x 25 inches deep 210 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 28 +inches long x 24 inches deep 310 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 35 +inches long x 25 inches deep 431 0 0 + +A Point d'Argentan flounce, 3 yards 16 +inches long x 24-1/2 inches deep 290 0 0 + +An Italian gold and thread lace flounce, +4 yards long, 29 inches deep 740 0 0 + +A length of Italian Rose Point, 4 yards +15 inches long, 3 inches deep 70 0 0 + +An old Italian Rose Point flounce, 3 +yards 31 inches long, 17-1/2 inches deep 660 0 0 + +An old Italian Rose Point square, 31 +inches x 34 inches 180 0 0 + +An old Italian Rose Point flounce, 3 +yards 19 inches long, 7-1/2 inches deep 520 0 0 + +An old Italian Rose Point panel, 34 +inches x 9 inches 95 0 0 + +A Point de Venise lappet a reseau, 46 +inches long, 5-1/4 inches wide 22 0 0 + +Point de Venise trimming, 8 yards long +x 4 inches deep 65 0 0 + +A piece of flat Venetian insertion, 4 +yards x 3-3/4 inches deep 92 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards long x 5 +inches deep 200 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 3 yards 31 inches +long x 22 inches deep 600 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 7 inches +long x 24 inches deep 540 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 3 yards 32 inches +long x 15 inches deep 560 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 11 inches +long x 18 inches deep, and a pair of +sleeves en suite 650 0 0 + +A Rose Point flounce, 4 yards 3 inches +long x 11-1/2 inches deep 510 0 0 + +A raised Point de Venise square, 1 yard +24 inches long x 1 yard 6 inches wide 450 0 0 + +An Old Brussels apron, 41 inches wide, +37 inches deep 145 0 0 + +A specimen piece of early Valenciennes, +2 yards long x 7 inches deep 42 0 0 + + +The following prices have been given by the South Kensington authorities +for specimens shown:-- + + L s. d. + +A Venetian Point altar-frontal, 8 x 3 feet 350 0 0 + +A Venetian chasuble, stole, maniple, +and chalice veil 200 0 0 + +A 2 yards x 5/8 yard Venetian flounce 125 0 0 + +A Gros Point collar 21 0 0 + +A Brussels lappet 23 0 0 + +A drawn-thread jacket 10 10 0 + +Linen cutwork tunic 20 0 0 + +[Illustration: EGYPTIAN EMBROIDERY. + +Found in a tomb at Thebes.] + + + + +CHATS ON NEEDLEWORK + + + + +I + +OLD ENGLISH EMBROIDERY + + Needlework pioneer art--Neolithic remains--Earliest known + English specimens--Bayeux tapestry. + + +While the subject of lace-making has been treated as almost +cosmopolitan, that of embroidery, in this volume, must be regarded as +purely national! I purposely refrain from introducing the embroideries +of other countries, other than mentioning the ancient civilisations +which shared the initial attempts to decorate garments, hangings, &c. +(of which we really know very little), and shall confine myself to the +needlework of this country, more especially as it is the one art and +craft of which England may be unfeignedly proud. It is assumed that +needlecraft was the pioneer art of the whole world, that the early +attempts to decorate textiles by embroideries of coloured silks, and the +elaborate use of gold and silver threadwork, first suggested painting, +sculpture, and goldsmith's work. Certainly early Egyptian paintings +imitated embroideries, and we have good ground for supposing that +stained glass was a direct copy of the old ecclesiastical figures or +ancient church vestments. The Neolithic remains found in Britain show +that at a very early period the art of making linen-cloth was +understood. Fragments of cloth, both of linen and wool, have been +discovered in a British barrow in Yorkshire, and early bone needles +found at different parts of the country are plentiful in our museums. +There is no doubt that we owe much of our civilisation to the visit of +the Phoenicians, those strange people, who appear to have carried all +the arts and crafts of ancient Babylon and Assyria to the wonder isles +of the Greek Archipelago, to Egypt, to Southern Spain, and to Cornwall +and Devonshire. These people, dwelling on the maritime border of +Palestine, were the great traders of their age, and while coming to this +country (then in a state of wildest barbarism) for tin left in exchange +a knowledge of the arts and appliances of civilisation hitherto not +understood. The Roman Invasion (45 B.C.) brought not only knowledge of +craftsmanship but also Christianity. St. Augustine, to whom the +conversion of the Britains is credited, carried with him a banner +embroidered with the image of Christ. After the Romans had left the +country, and it had become invaded by the Celts and the Danes, and had +again been taken possession of by the Saxons, a period of not only rest +but advancement arrived, and we see early in the seventh century the +country prosperous and settled. Aldhelm, Bishop of Sherborne, wrote a +poem in which he speaks of the tapestry-weaving and the embroidery which +the women of England occupied their lives. + +[Illustration: A LENGTH OF THE FAMOUS BAYEUX TAPESTRY.] + +The earliest specimen of embroidery known to have been executed in +England is that of the stole and maniple of St. Cuthbert, which is now +treasured at Durham Cathedral. These were worked by Aelfled, the Queen +of Edward the Elder, Alfred the Great's son. She worked them for Bishop +Fridhestan in 905 A.D. Her son Athelstan, after her death, visited the +shrine of St. Cuthbert, at Chester-le-street, and in an inventory of the +rich gifts which he left there, there is recorded "one stole with a +maniple," amongst other articles. These very embroideries were removed +from the actual body of St. Cuthbert in 1827. They are described by an +eyewitness as being "of woven gold, with spaces left vacant for +needlework embroideries." Exquisitely embroidered figures are in niches +or clouds. The whole effect is described as being that of a fine +illuminated MS. of the ninth century, and indescribably beautiful. +Another great prelate, St. Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury, designed +embroideries for the execution of pious ladies of his diocese (924 A.D.). + +Emma, Queen of Ethelred the Unready, and afterwards of Canute, designed +and embroidered many church vestments and altar-cloths, and Editha, wife +of Edward the Confessor, embroidered the King's coronation mantle. + +The great and monumental Bayeux tapestry--which is miscalled, as it is +_embroidery_--was the work of Queen Matilda, who, like Penelope, wove +the mighty deeds of her husband and king in an immense embroidery. This +piece of needlecraft comes upon us as a shock, rather than an +admiration, after the exquisite embroideries worked by and for the +Church. It is interesting, however, as a valuable historic "document," +showing the manners and customs of the time. The canvas is 227 feet long +and 20 inches wide, and shows events of English history from the +accession of Edward the Confessor to the defeat of Harold, at Hastings. +It is extremely crude; no attempt is made at shading, the figures being +worked in flat stitch in coloured wools, on linen canvas. Certainly it +is one of the quaintest and most primitive attempts of working pictures +by needlecraft. + +The evidence of the costumes, the armour, &c., are supposed to tell us +that this tapestry was worked many years after the Conquest, but it can +be traced by documentary evidence as having been seen in Bayeux +Cathedral as far back as 1476. In the time of Napoleon I. it was removed +from the cathedral and was actually used as a covering for a transport +waggon. Finally, however, it was exhibited in the Musee Napoleon, in +1803, and was afterwards returned to Bayeux. In 1840 it was restored and +relined, and is now in the Hotel de Ville at Bayeux! + +[Illustration: KING HAROLD. + +(_From the Bayeux Tapestry._)] + + + + +II + +THE GREAT PERIOD OF EMBROIDERY + + + + +II + +THE GREAT PERIOD OF EMBROIDERY + + "Opus Anglicanum"--The Worcester fragments--St. + Benedict--Legend of Pope Innocent--The "Jesse" cope--The "Syon" + cope. + + +The great period of English embroidery is supposed to have been from the +twelfth to the thirteenth century. Very little remains to show this, +except a few fragments of vestments from the tombs of the bishops dating +from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and other data obtained from +various foreign inventories of later date referring to the use of "Opus +Anglicanum." Some portion of the Worcester fragments may be seen in the +South Kensington Museum, and can only be described as being so perfect +in workmanship, colour, and style as even at this day to be more like a +magnificent piece of goldsmith's work than that of needlecraft. The +background is apparently one mass of thread of fine gold worked in and +out of a silken mesh, the embroidery appearing just as clear and neat in +manipulation as an illumination. The coloured photographs, which may be +seen in the same room, of the stole and maniple of St. Cuthbert are of +precisely the same work. Judging from these, and the embroidered orphrey +which the authorities bought from the Hockon Collection for L119 1s. +10d. and which is only 4 feet 8 inches long, there is no doubt that this +was, _par excellence_, the finest period. The work can only be described +as being like an old Italian painting on a golden ground. We see +precisely such design and colouring in ancient paintings for altars as +in the old Italian Triptychs. This style was carried out as literally as +possible. Even the defects, if so they may be called, are there, and a +slight topheaviness of the figures serves but to accentuate the +likeness. + +There is a legend that during the times of the Danish incursions St. +Benedict travelled backwards and forwards through France and Italy, and +brought with him during his _seven_ journeys artificers in _glass_ and +_stone_, besides costly books and copies of the Scriptures. The chief +end and aim of monastic life, both of monk and nun, in those early days +was to embroider, paint, and illuminate their sacred books, vestments, +and edifices with what was to them a newly-inspired faith. + +Dr. Rock, in his "Church of Our Fathers," says that from the twelfth +century to the time of Henry VIII. that only the best materials that +could be found in our country or that of other lands were employed, and +that the art that was used on them was the best that could be learnt or +given. The original fabrics often came from Byzantium or were of +Saracenic origin. + +[Illustration: FROM THE "JESSE" COPE (_South Kensington Museum_). + +English, early Fourteenth Century.] + +The story of Pope Innocent III., who, seeing certain vestments and +orphreys, and being informed that they were English, said, "Surely +England must be a garden of delight!" must be quoted to show how English +work was appreciated in those early days. + +The choicest example in this country of this glorious period of English +embroidery is the famous Syon cope, which is supposed to rank as the +most magnificent garment belonging to the Church. It may be regarded as +a typical example of real English work, the "Opus Anglicanum" or +"Anglicum," which, although used for other purposes, such as +altar-cloths and altar-frontals, found apparently its fullest scope in +these large semicircular mantles. + +Amongst the many copes treasured at South Kensington there are none, +amidst all their splendour, as fine as this, although the fragment of +the "Jesse" cope runs it very closely. There are many copes of this +period in different parts of the Continent--the Daroca Cope at Madrid, +one at Ascagni, another at Bologna, at St. Bertrand-de-Comminges, at +"St. John Lateran" at Rome, at Pienza and Toleda, and a fragment of one +with the famous altar-frontal at Steeple Aston. These are all assumed to +be of "Opus Anglicanum," and they may be described as being technically +perfect, the stitches being of fine small tambour stitch, beautifully +even, and the draperies exquisitely shaded. + +The illustration showing the Syon Cope requires some little explanation. +It is wrought on linen, embroidered all over with gold and silver thread +and coloured silk. It is 9 feet 7 inches long, 4 feet 8 inches wide. +The whole of the cope except the border is covered with interlacing +quatrefoils outlined in gold. The ground of these quatrefoils is covered +with red silk and the spaces between them with green silk. Each +quatrefoil is filled with scenes from the life of Christ, the Virgin, +and figures of St. Michael and of the Apostles. On the green spaces are +worked figures of six-winged angels standing on whorls. The chief place +on the quatrefoils is given to the crucifixion, where the body of the +Saviour is worked in silver and cloth of gold. The Virgin, arrayed in +green tunic and golden mantle, is on one side and St. John, in gold, on +the other. Above the quatrefoil is another representing the Redeemer +seated on a cushioned throne with the Virgin, and below another +representing St. Michael overcoming Satan. Other quatrefoils show +"Christ appearing to St. Mary Magdalen," "The Burial of the Virgin," +"The Coronation of the Virgin," "The Death of the Virgin with the +Apostles surrounding her," "The Incredulity of St. Thomas," "St. Simon," +"St. Bartholomew," "St. Peter," "St. Paul," "St. Thomas," "St. Andrew," +and "St. James." Portions of four other Apostles may be seen, but at +some period the cope has been cut down. In its original state the cope +showed the twelve Apostles. The lower portion has been cut away and +reshaped, and round this is an edging apparently made out of a stole and +maniple which point to a later date, as they are worked chiefly in +cross-stitch. On the orphrey are emblazoned the arms of Warwick, Castile +and Leon, Ferrars, Geneville Everard, the badge of the Knights +Templars, Clifford, Spencer, Lindsay, Le Botelier, Sheldon, Monteney of +Essex, Champernoun, Everard, Tyddeswall Grandeson, Fitz Alan, Hampden, +Percy, Clanvowe, Ribbesford, Bygod, Roger de Mortimer, Grove, B. +Bassingburn, and many others not recognisable. These coats of arms, it +is suggested, belonged to the noble dames who worked the border. The +angels which fill the intervening spaces are of the six-winged +varieties, each standing on whorls or wheels. + +[Illustration: THE "SYON" COPE. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +The cope is worked in a fine tambour or chain stitch principally. All +the faces, bodies, and draperies are composed of this. A specially +noticeable point is that the faces are worked spirally, beginning in the +centre of the cheek and being worked round and round, conforming with +the muscles of the face. The garments are worked according to the hang +of the drapery, very fine effects being obtained. After the work has +been completed a hot iron something like a little iron rod with a +bulbous end has been pressed into the cheeks, under the throat, and in +different parts of the nude body. Occasionally, but seldom, the same +device may be seen in the drapery. All the work is exquisitely fine and +perfectly even. The groundwork of the quatrefoils is of gold-laid or +"couch" work, as is also that of the armorial bearings. + +The name "Syon" is somewhat misleading, as the Cope was not made here, +but came into the hands of the Bridgettine nuns in 1414, when Henry V. +founded the convent of "Syon" at Isleworth. Its origin and date will +ever be a matter of conjecture, but Dr. Rock infers that Coventry may +have been the place of its origin. Taking Coventry as a centre with a +small radius, several of the great feudal houses the arms of which are +on the border of the cope may be found, and Dr. Rock further supposes +that Eleanor, widow of Edward the First, may have become a sister of the +fraternity unknown, as her arms, Castile and Leon, are on it. "The whole +must have taken long in working, and the probability is that it was +embroidered by nuns of some convent which stood on or near Coventry." +However this may be, it is certain that this splendid piece of English +work came into the hands, by some means, of the nuns of Syon, and after +remaining with them at Isleworth till Elizabeth's time, it was carried +by them through Flanders, France, and Portugal. They remained at the +latter place till the same persecution which dispersed the famous +Spanish Point lace over the length and breadth of the Continent, and +about eighty years ago it was brought back to England, and was given by +the remaining members of the Order to the Earl of Shrewsbury. After +further vicissitudes of a varied character it was bought by the South +Kensington Museum for L110, and now sheds the glory of its golden +threads in a dark transept unnoticed except by the student. + + + + +III + +ECCLESIASTICAL EMBROIDERIES AND VESTMENTS + + +[Illustration: HALF OF THE STEEPLE ASTON ALTAR FRONTAL. + +English, Fourteenth Century.] + + + + +III + +ECCLESIASTICAL EMBROIDERIES AND VESTMENTS + + The Pierpont Morgan purchase--The Steeple Aston + Altar-frontal--The "Nevil" Altar-frontal at S. K. M.--City + palls--Diagram of vestments. + + +Other copes of the same period are in the Madrid Museum, two copes at +Bologna, and the "Ascoli" cope recently purchased by Mr. J. Pierpont +Morgan and generously returned by him. Some cushions from Catworth +Church, Huntingdon, now at the South Kensington Museum, were probably +cut from copes, and bought by permission of the Bishop of Ely for L27. A +long band of red velvet at South Kensington Museum embroidered with gold +and silver and coloured silk has evidently been made from the "Apparels" +of an alb. It is in two pieces, each piece depicting five scenes divided +by broad arches. The first five are from the life of the Virgin, and +are: "The Angel appearing to Anna," "The Meeting of Anna and Joachim," +"Birth of the Virgin," "Presentation of the Virgin," "Education of the +Virgin." In the second piece are: "The Annunciation," "The Salutation," +"The Nativity," "The Angel appearing to the Shepherds," and the +"Journey of the Magi." + +Another piece of similar work is the altar-frontal of Steeple Aston, +which was originally a cope, and the cope now at Stonyhurst College, +originally belonging to Westminster Cathedral. It is made of one +seamless piece of gold tissue. + +During this great period of English embroidery certain characteristics +along with its superb workmanship must be noticed. The earlier the work +the finer the modelling of the figures. In the figures of the St. +Cuthbert and the Worcester fragments the proportions of the figures are +exquisite; at a later date, while the work is just as excellent, the +figures become unnatural, the heads being unduly large, the eyes +staring, and the perspective entirely out of drawing. Until the +fourteenth century this comes so gradually as to be scarcely noted; but +after and through the fifteenth century this becomes so marked as to be +almost grotesque, and only the genuine religious fervour with which +these poor remnants have been worked prevents many of them being +ridiculous. The faces gradually show less careful drawing and working, +and the figures become squat and topheavy. The emblems of the saints are +often omitted. + +[Illustration: THE "NEVIL" ALTAR FRONTAL. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +This decline in the embroiderer's art is specially noticeable in an +extraordinary panel to be seen at South Kensington Museum, where an +altar-frontal of stamped crimson velvet is appliqued in groups of +figures in gold, silver, and silks. In the middle is the Crucifixion, +with the Virgin and St. John standing on a strip covered with flowers. +On the left is Ralph Nevil, fourth Earl of Westmoreland, 1523, kneeling, +and behind him his seven sons. On the right is Lady Catherine Stafford, +his wife, also kneeling, and behind her kneel her thirteen daughters. +The frontal cost the museum L50 and is well worth it as an historical +document. Other important embroideries of the period to be found in +England are at Cirencester Cathedral, Ely Cathedral, Salisbury and +Carlisle Cathedrals, Chipping Norton and Little Dean in Gloucestershire, +East Langdon in Kent, Buckland and Stourton in Worcester, Littleworth in +Leicestershire, Lynn in Norfolk, and the Parish Church at Warrington. + +Many of the palls belonging to the great city companies belong to this +date. The Saddlers' Company's pall is of crimson velvet embroidered with +angels surrounding "I.H.S.," and arms of the Company. The Fishmongers' +Pall, made at the end of the fifteenth century, has at one end the +figure of St. Peter (the patron saint of fishermen) enthroned, and +angels on either side, and at the other end St. Peter receiving the keys +from our Lord. The Vintners' Pall is made of Italian velvet and cloth of +gold and embroidered with St. Martin of Tours. + +Religious influence characterised the embroideries of England +practically from the ninth to the sixteenth centuries. Practically all +needlework prior to 1600 is entirely ecclesiastical, and from its +limited range in choice of subjects barely does justice to the fine work +this period produced. + +Dr. Rock says that "few persons of the present day have the faintest +idea of the labour, the money, the time, often bestowed on old +embroideries which had been designed by the hands of men and women each +in their own craft the best and ablest of the day." + +We do not know the length of time these ancient vestments occupied in +the making, but twenty-six years is stated to be the period of making +the vestments for the Church of San Giovanni, in Florence. This is all +worked in close stitches similar to our English work. + + +_Ancient Church Vestments._ + +The names of the ecclesiastical vestments are somewhat puzzling to those +of us who do not belong to the Romish Church, or even to the English +High Church. The vestments described are, we believe, in use in the +Romish churches now as in the early times when church embroidery was the +pleasure and the labour of all classes of English women. The +accompanying diagram will better illustrate the use of these vestments +than a page of writing. + + +[Illustration: ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS. + +1. Amice. +2. Orphreys. +3. Chasuble. +4. Sleeves of Alb. +5 and 9. Apparel of Alb. +6. Maniple. +7. Stole. +8. Alb. + +_From "A Guide to Ecclesiastical Law," by kind permission of Mr. Henry +Miller._] + + * * * * * + +The Alb is often trimmed handsomely with lace, the apparels are stitched +on to the front. The Stoles ought to have three crosses embroidered on +it and be 3 yards long. Over this comes the Chasuble, which is the +last garment the priest puts on before celebrating Mass. The Cope is a +huge semi-circular 10 ft. wide cape. The Maniple is a strip of +embroidery 3 ft. 4 in. long worn over the left wrist of the priest. + +[Illustration: ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENTS. + +English, Fifteenth or early Sixteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +IV + +TUDOR EMBROIDERY + + + + +IV + +TUDOR EMBROIDERY + + The influences of the Reformation--Queen Catherine of Aragon's + needlecraft--The gorgeous clothes of Henry VIII.--Field of the + Cloth of Gold--Queen Elizabeth's embroideries. + + +After the Reformation and the wholesale destruction of the cathedrals, +monasteries, and churches, the gentle dames of England found their +occupation gone. The priestly vestments, the sumptuous altar-cloths, and +gorgeous hangings were now needless. Those which had been the glory of +their owners, and the pictorial representations of Biblical life to the +uneducated masses of people, had been ruthlessly torn down and destroyed +for the sake of the gold to be found on them. As in the time immediately +preceding the French Revolution, costly embroideries were unpicked, and +the amount of gold and silver obtained from them became a source of +income and profit to their destroyers. + +Apart from her household, women had no other interests in those days, +unless we accept such anomalies as Lady Jane Grey, who was a marvel of +learning and wisdom. All their long leisure hours had been spent, not in +improving their minds, but in beautifying the churches with specimens of +their skill. Catherine of Aragon, one of the unfortunate queens of Henry +VIII., was a notable needlewoman, and spent much of her short, unhappy +time as Queen of England in embroidery. The lace-making of Northampton +is said to have been commenced by her during her period of retirement +after her divorce. The "Spanish stitch," which was known and used in +embroidery of that period, was introduced by her from her own country, +and many examples of her skill in embroidery are to be seen in the +British Museum and the various homes belonging to our old nobility. + +During the reign of Henry VIII. dress became very sumptuous, as the +contemporary pictures of the times show. Indeed, all the fervour and +feeling which ladies had worked in religious vestments now seemed to +find refuge in the over-elaboration of personal wear. Very little lace +was used, and that of only a primitive description, so that effect was +produced by embroidery in gold and silver threads and the use of pearls +and precious stones. The dress of the nobles in the time of Henry VIII. +was especially gorgeous, the coats being thickly padded and quilted with +gold bullion thread, costly jewels afterwards being sewn in the +lozenges. It is related that after his successful divorce King Henry +gave a banquet to celebrate his marriage to Anne Boleyn, and wore a coat +covered with the jewelled letters "H," and in the height of his +satisfaction allowed the ladies to cut or tear away the jewels as +souvenirs of his triumph over Wolsey and Catherine. It is said that he +was left in his underwear, so great was the competition for these +favours! Robes made of gold tissue, then called Cloth of Gold, were +used, and in Henry's meeting with Francis I. the English and French +armies vied with each other as to which should present a greater +magnificence. The name "the Field of the Cloth of Gold" remains as a +guarantee of its splendour. + +Under the more austere and religious rule of Queen Mary we might suppose +that ecclesiastical embroidery would have somewhat regained a foothold. +But the landmarks had been entirely swept away, and we have little to +record of the reign, except that Mary herself was a clever needlewoman +and worked much of her heartache, at the neglect of her Spanish husband, +into her needlework. Her jealousy of her sister Elizabeth caused the +latter to spend her life away from the pomps and ceremonies of the +Court, and she has left many records of her handiwork, some well +authenticated, as, for example, the two exquisite book-covers in the +British Museum. Queen Elizabeth cannot, however, be said to have been in +any way a patroness of the art of needlecraft. Her talent seems rather +to have been devoted to affairs of State--and her wardrobe! On her +death, at seventy years of age, she left over one thousand dresses, most +of which must have been a cruel weight, so overburdened were they with +stiff bullion and trimmed with large pearls and jewels. Her dresses were +literally diapered with gold and silver "gimps" inset with heavier +stones, but little real embroidery is shown. + +Mary Queen of Scots, on the contrary, was a born needlewoman. During her +married life in France she learned the gentle arts of embroidery and +lace-making, accomplishments which, as in many humbler women's lives, +have served their owners in good stead in times of loneliness and +trouble. The Duke of Devonshire possesses specimens of Queen Mary's +skill, worked during the long, dreary days of her imprisonment at +Fotheringay. It is said that Queen Elizabeth was not above helping +herself to the wardrobe and laces that the unfortunate Queen of Scotland +brought with her from France. + +Much embroidery must have been worked for the adornment of the house +after the Reformation, but beyond an occasional old inventory nothing is +left to show it. After the Reformation greater luxury in living +obtained, and instead of the clean or rush-strewn floors some kind of +floor-covering was used. Furniture became much more ornamental, and the +use of hangings for domestic purposes was common. Not a thread of these +hand-worked hangings remain, but we have the immense and immediate use +of tapestry, which first became a manufacture of England in the reign of +Henry VIII. It is easy to conceive that English women would readily +seize upon the idea supplied in tapestry and adapt its designs to that +of embroidery. It is certain that hangings for the old four-post beds +were embroidered, as in the inventory of Wolsey's great palace at +Hampton Court there is mention of 230 bed-hangings of English +embroidery. Nothing of this remains, so that its style is simply +conjectural; and we can only suppose these hangings to have been +replicas of the magnificent velvet and satin hangings, covered with laid +or couched gold and silver threads, such as Catherine of Aragon would +bring with her from Spain. This also would account for their absolute +disappearance. The value of the gold and silver in embroidery has always +been a fertile source of wealth to the destroyer of ancient fabrics, +while many embroideries worked only in silks have escaped this +vandalism. + + + + +V + +EARLY NEEDLEWORK PICTURES AND ACCESSORIES + + +[Illustration: EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE. + +Late Sixteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +V + +EARLY NEEDLEWORK PICTURES AND ACCESSORIES + + "Petit point"--old list of stitches--Stuart + bags--Gloves--Shoes--Caps. + + +Towards the end of James I.'s reign it is supposed that the earliest +needlework pictures appeared. They were obviously literal copies of the +tapestries which had now become of general use in the homes of the +wealthy, being worked in what is known as "petit point," or "little +stitch." This stitch was worked on canvas of very close quality, with +fine silk thread, one stitch only being taken over the junction of the +warp and the weft of the canvas instead of the "cross stitch" of later +days. Very few of these specimens are left of an early date. A panel, +measuring 30 inches by 16 inches, in perfect condition, and dated 1601, +was sold at Christie's Rooms this year for L115. The purchaser, Mr. +Stoner, of King Street, sold it next day at a very considerable profit. + +At this period the workers of these pictures did not draw upon Biblical +subjects for their inspiration (with great advantage to the picture, it +may be stated). The subjects were either fanciful adaptations from real +life, with the little people dressed in contemporary costume, or dainty +little mythological subjects, such as the "Judgment of Paris," "Corydon +wooing Phyllis," with most absurd little castles of Tudor construction +in impossible landscapes, where the limpid stream meandered down +fairy-like hills into a shining lake, which held dolphins under the +water and water-fowl above it. The illustration depicts such a specimen, +and shows one of these tiny pictures worked in no less than ten +different stitches of lacework, in addition to the usual petit point. +The number of these stitches is legion. In the reign of Charles I., John +Taylor, the water-poet, wrote in 1640: + + "For tent worke, raised worke, first worke, laid worke, net worke, + Most curious purl, or rare Italian cut worke, + Fire, ferne stitch, finny stitch, new stitch, chain stitch, + Brave bred stitch, fisher stitch, Irish stitch, and Queen stitch, + The Spanish stitch, Rosemary stitch, and mowle stitch, + The smarting whip stitch, back stitch, and cross stitch; + All these are good, and this we must allow, + And they are everywhere in practice now." + +[Illustration: VERY EARLY "PETIT POINT" PICTURE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +These are not _all_ the stitches in vogue during the first era of +needlework pictures. A single glance at one of the early specimens, +though it may not _charm_, fills one with amazement at the amount of +toil, ingenuity, patience, and downright _love_ for the work the ancient +needlewoman must have possessed. Not only pictures, however, were +made in petit point. Many dainty little accessories of the toilet gave +scope to the delicate fancy and nimble fingers of the ladies who had +found solace from the cessation of their labours for the priesthood in +making dainty little handbags and other pretty articles, each a marvel +of minute handicraft. One bag in my possession measures only four inches +square, and is worked on fine canvas, about forty threads to the square +inch, the design being the favourite Tudor rose, each petal worked in +lace stitch, and raised from the centre which is made of knots worked +with golden hair, flat green leaves exquisitely shaded, and a charming +bit of the worker's skill in the shape of a pea's pod, open and raised, +showing the tiny little peas in a row. An exquisitely worked butterfly +with raised wings in lace stitch is on the other side. The grounding of +the whole is run with flat gold thread, making a "cloth of gold" ground, +strings made of similarly worked canvas, with gold thread and silk +tassels complete a bag fit for the Princess Golden Locks of our fairy +tales. This little bag cost the writer 5 guineas, and was cheap at the +price. The South Kensington Museum have several specimens, and although +many are very exquisite, there is not one quite so perfect in design nor +in such condition. Other little trifles made in similar style are the +embroidered gauntlets of the buff leather glove worn at the time. These +have become rarer than any other embroideries, as they were not merely +for ornament but for actual wear. Four or five of these gauntlet gloves +are in the South Kensington Collection, but are of a later date than +the "petit point" period. + +The use of gloves in England was not very general, we may infer, in the +earlier ages of embroidery. There are certain evidences, however, +showing that the glove was part of the priestly outfit, remains of +gloves having been found on the bones of Thomas a Becket when they were +transferred from the crypt of Canterbury Cathedral to the special shrine +prepared for them; and a crimson leather pair, bearing the sacred +monogram in embroidered gold, are preserved in the New College, Oxford, +belonging to the founder, William of Wykeham, who opened the college in +1386. + +It was not until the fourteenth century that the wearing of gloves +became general, and practically nothing remains to show what manner of +hand-covering was worn until the Tudor period. Henry VIII. was +exceptionally lavish and extravagant in the use of handsomely +embroidered gloves, and few of his portraits show him without a +sumptuous glove in one hand. He had gloves for all functions--like a +modern fashionable woman. A pair of hawking gloves belonging to him are +in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, and in South Kensington is one of a +pair presented by Henry to his friend and Councillor Sir Anthony Denny. +It is of buff, thin leather, with a white satin gauntlet, embroidered +with blue and red silk in applique work, decorated with seed-pearls and +spangles, and trimmed with gold lace. The Tudor rose, the crown, and the +lion are worked amidst a splendour of gold and pearls. + +[Illustration: A STUART GLOVE. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Queen Elizabeth must have inherited her love for gorgeous apparel along +with her strong personality and masterful spirit, as her expenditure for +gloves alone was proverbial. The favourite offering to her was a pair of +gloves, but she was not above accepting shoes, handkerchiefs, laces, and +even gowns from her faithful and admiring subjects. On her visit to +Oxford in 1578 she was presented by the Chancellor of the University +with a pair of perfumed gloves, embroidered with gold and set with +jewels, which cost the University sixty shillings, an immense sum in +those days. Other historic gloves are in the various museums of the +country, seldom or never coming into the open market. In the +Braikenridge Collection sold at Christie's in February of this year I +was able to secure one for L2 12s. 6d., immediately afterwards being +offered double the price for it. + +The gloves belonging to Charles I. and Queen Henrietta Maria were very +ornamental, and it is said that even Oliver Cromwell, with all his +austerity, was not proof against the fascination of the decorated glove. + +With Charles II. the embroidered gloves seem to have vanished along with +the stumpwork pictures, of which more anon. + +Dainty shoes were embroidered in those old times. These, being articles +of wear, like the gloves, are very rare. The same fine petit point work +is seen on them; seed-pearls and in-run gold threads adorn them, and +frequently the Tudor rose, in raised work, forms the shoe knot. Two +pairs in Lady Wolseley's Collection, sold in 1906, fetched six guineas, +and nine and a half guineas. Tiny pocket-books were covered with this +pretty work, and charming covers almost as fresh as when they were +worked are occasionally unearthed, made to hold the old-fashioned +housekeeping and cooking books. + +One wonders oftentime how many, and yet, alas! how few, specimens of +this old petit point work have been preserved. It is only during recent +years that the "cult of the antique" has been fashionable, and is also +becoming a source of income and profit to the many who indulge in its +quest. Only members of learned antiquarian societies or born reliquaries +troubled themselves to acquire ancient articles of historic interest +because they were _old_, and served to form the sequence in the fairy +tales of Time. Anything "old" was ruthlessly destroyed, as being either +past wear, shabby, or old-fashioned, and countless treasures, both in +ecclesiastical and secular art, have at all periods been recklessly +destroyed for the sake of their intrinsic value in gold or jewels. In +the early days of my life I was allowed to pick out the corals and +seed-pearls from an old Stuart needle picture "for a doll's necklace!" +the picture itself probably going into the "rag-bag" of the +mid-Victorian good housekeeper. + + + + +VI + +STUART CASKETS AND MIRRORS + + + + +VI + +STUART CASKETS AND MIRRORS + + Secret drawers and hidden receptacles--High prices in the + Salerooms. + + +Among the many treasures of this exquisite period of needlecraft are the +well-known Stuart caskets. Very interesting and valuable are these +charming boxes, many of them being in a fine state of preservation, +owing to their having been enclosed in either a wooden or leathern box +specially made to contain them. These queer little boxes are frequently +made in the shape of Noah's ark. The lid being raised, a fitted mirror +is disclosed. The mirror slides out, and a secret recess may be +discovered to hold letters. The front falls down, disclosing any number +of tiny drawers, each drawer being silk-lined and the front of it +embroidered. Here, again, we may look for secret drawers. Very seldom +does the drawer run to the width of the cabinet, but by removing every +drawer and carefully searching for springs or slides many a tiny recess +is disclosed, where costly jewels, and perhaps a love-gage, has reposed +safely from the sight of unworthy eyes. + +Every square inch of these caskets is covered with embroidery, sometimes +in canvas, worked with the usual scriptural or mythological design, and +in others with white satin, exquisitely embroidered with figures and +floral subjects. Those in best preservation have been covered with mica, +which has preserved both the colour and the fabric. The fittings are +generally of silver. On the few occasions when these boxes or caskets +come into the market high prices are realised. Messrs. Christie last +year obtained L40 for a good specimen. I have never seen one sold under +L30, and as much as L100 has been given. + +Another pretty fancy was to cover small trays, presumably for the work +or dressing table, with embroidery. Not many of these remain, the wear +of removing them from place to place having been too much for their +staying powers. One in my possession is a small hexagonal tray with +raised sides, embroidered in coloured silks in floral design, on what +was once white satin. It is by no means a thing of beauty now, but as a +specimen it is interesting, and "a poor thing, but mine own," which +covers a multitude of shortcomings in these old relics, fortunately. + +[Illustration: "STUART" MIRROR FRAME. + +(_Lady Wolseley's Collection._)] + +Far more frequently met with, though quite prohibitive in price, are the +Stuart embroidered mirrors, which easily command L80 to L100 in the +salerooms. They are generally set in a frame of oak, leaving five or six +inches (which would otherwise be covered with carving or veneer) for +the embroidery. The mirror itself is comparatively small, being only +a secondary consideration, and often little remains of it for its +original purpose, as the glass is blurred and the silvering gone. Many +of these mirrors have _bevelled_ glass, which, of course, is wrong. + +The mirror shown in the illustration is one recently belonging to +Viscountess Wolseley and sold by her, among other Stuart needlework +specimens, at Messrs. Puttick & Simpson's in 1906. This mirror sold for +L100. The figures represent Charles I. and Queen Henrietta Maria, one on +either side of the mirror. The figure at the top of the frame is +difficult to understand; whether she is an angel or a mere Court lady +must be left to conjecture. The rolling clouds and the blazing sun are +above her head, and a peacock, with tail displayed, is on one side and a +happy-looking stag on the other. Two royal residences adorn the topmost +panels on either side, with all their bravery of flying flags and +smoking chimneys, and the lion and the leopard occupy the lower panels. +The latter animal identifies the King and Queen, who might otherwise be +Charles II. and his consort, as after Charles I.'s time the leopard gave +place to the unicorn for some unexplained reason. Other typical little +Stuart animals and birds fill in the extra panels, such as the spotted +dog who chases a little hare who is never caught, and the gaily-coloured +parroquet and kingfisher, which no respectable Stuart picture would be +without. The caterpillar, the ladybird, and the snail are all _en +evidence_; and below is a real pond, covered with talc, and containing +fish and ducks, the banks being made of tiny branching coral beads and +tufted silk and bullion work. + +About this time, when Venetian lace came into fashionable use as an +adjunct to the exquisite Stuart dress, tiny coloured beads were imported +from Venice. The embroiderers at once seized upon them as a new and +possibly more lasting means of showing their pretty fancies in design. +Many delightful specimens of these beadwork pictures are preserved, the +colours, of course, being as fresh as yesterday. The ground was always +of white satin, now faded and discoloured with age, and often torn with +the heaviness of the beadwork design. They are scarcely so charming as +the all needlework pictures, but still are delightful and covetable +articles. The exigencies of the beadwork, however, lends a certain +stiffness and ungainliness to the figures. + + + + +VII + +EMBROIDERED BOOKS AND "BLACK WORK" + + +[Illustration: "STUART" BOOK COVER. + +(_British Museum._)] + + + + +VII + +EMBROIDERED BOOKS AND "BLACK WORK" + + Style and symbolism--Specimen in British Museum and Bodleian + Libraries--"Black work" + + +Among the many dainty examples of Tudor and Stuart needlework are to be +found the exquisitely embroidered book-covers which date from Queen +Elizabeth's girlhood until the time of Charles II. They were always of +diminutive size, and many stitches diversify their covering; oftentimes +they were liberally embroidered with seed-pearls, and in these instances +most frequently this fashion has been their salvation. A book somehow +always seems to be a more sacred thing than a picture, and the costly +little volumes which remain to show this dainty handicraft have +apparently always been used either for Church or private devotional +purposes. + +The designs of the book-covers almost always follow certain styles. +These are either heraldic, scriptural, symbolical, floral, or arabesque. + +The first-named variety usually belonged to royalty or one of the many +noble houses whose ladies busied themselves with fair needlework. The +shield, containing the coat of arms of the family, occupied the centre +of the book-cover, being formed in raised gold and silver guipure or +cord, and on the reverse the worker's initials frequently appear, with a +pretty border in gold and silver, to outline the edges. + +The scriptural book-covers are always worked on canvas in fine petit +point stitches. One in South Kensington Museum is larger than most of +these volumes, and has on one side Solomon in all his glory and on the +reverse Jacob and his ladder and King David. These canvas-covered books +appear to have suffered most from the wear and tear of time, and very +few remain. + +The symbolical covers are few, and mostly uninteresting. They are worked +as a rule on silk and satin in loose satin stitches, which have suffered +much from friction. The sacred monogram is often the centre of the +device. A favourite design was adorning the back of the books with +portraits of the martyred King Charles I., Queen Henrietta Maria, and +the popular Duke of Buckingham. + +[Illustration: POCKET-BOOK OF SATIN, EMBROIDERED WITH COLOURED SILKS AND +SILVER-GILT THREAD. + +Said to have been the property of Queen Elizabeth. + +(_In Countess Brownlow's Collection._)] + +The stitches used were generally chain-stitch, split-stitch, petit +point, and lace-stitch; and the patterns were most frequently outlined +with a gimp made of flattened spiral wire, or _purl_, which was a fine +copper wire covered with coloured silks and cut in lengths for use. Very +often, also, small silver spangles were employed, either stitched down +with a piece of purl or a seed-pearl. Frequently the covers were of +velvet with the designs appliqued down to it, and _laid_ or _couch_ work +outlined the designs. Sometimes flat pieces of metal were cut to shape +and stitched down, as in one instance where the corners of the books +were trimmed with the rays of the sun cut in gold, and stitched over +with a gold thread. + +Many of the charming little bags of which mention has already been made +are supposed to have been worked to hold the Prayer Book and Book of +Psalms, without which no devout lady deemed herself fully equipped. + +The most famous book is Queen Elizabeth's Book in the British Museum. +The cover is of choice green velvet, the flat of the back has five roses +embroidered in lace, raised stitches and gold and pearl. The Royal Arms +are on either side of the book in a lozenge of red silk and pearls. The +whole design, apart from this, is worked in red and white roses and +scrolls of gold and silk. This gorgeous little cover contains "The +Mirrour of Glasse of the Synneful Soul," written by Elizabeth herself, +and of it she writes that she "translated it out of french ryme into +english prose, joyning the sentences together as well as the capacities +of my symple witte and small lerning could extende themselves." It is +dedicated "To our most noble and virtuous Queen Katherine [Katherine +Parr] from Assherige, the last day of the year of our Lord God, 1544." + +In the Bodleian Library there is another treasured little book, again +worked by Queen Elizabeth. It is only 7 inches by 5 inches, and has the +same design on both sides. In this the ground is what is known as +"tapestry stitch," worked in thick, pale-blue silk, and the design is of +interlacing gold and silver threads with a Tudor rose in each corner. +"K. P." is marked on the cover, and shows that this also was worked for +Queen Katherine Parr. + +Yet another little book is in the British Museum. It contains a prayer +composed by Queen Katherine Parr, and is written on vellum by Queen +Elizabeth. + +The cover illustrated is a typical example of the class of embroidered +works of the period. Later the covers showed less intricate work, and +finally developed into mere velvet covers embroidered with silver or +gold. + +[Illustration: STUART EMBROIDERED CAP. (_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + +BLACK WORK. + +A curious phase of Old English embroidery is the well-known "Black +Work," which is said to have been introduced by Catherine of Aragon into +England, and was also known as "Spanish work." The work itself was a +marvel of neatness, precision, and elegant design, but the result cannot +be said to have been commensurate with the labour of its production. +Most frequently the design was of scroll-work, worked with a fine black +silk back-stitching or chain-stitch. Round and round the stitches go, +following each other closely. Bunches of grapes are frequently worked +solidly, and even the popular peascod is worked in outline stitch, and +often the petit point period lace stitches are copied, and roses and +birds worked separately and after stitched to the design. There are many +examples of this famous "Spanish" work in the South Kensington +Museum. Quilts, hangings, coats, caps, jackets, smocks are all to be +seen, some with a couched thread of gold and silver following the lines +of the scrolls. This is said to be the Spanish stitch referred to in the +old list of stitches, and very likely may be so, as the style and manner +are certainly not English; and we know that Catherine of Aragon brought +wonders of Spanish stitchery with her, and she herself was devoted to +the use of the needle. The story of how when called before Cardinal +Wolsey and Campeggio, to answer to King Henry's accusations, she had a +skein of embroidery silk round her neck is well known. + +The black silk outline stitchery or linen lasted well through the late +seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Very little of it is seen outside +the museums, as, not being strikingly beautiful or attractive, it has +been destroyed. + +Another phase of the same stitchery was working cotton and linen +garments, hangings, and quilts in a kind of quilted pattern with yellow +silk. + +Anything more unlike the quilting of fifty years ago cannot be imagined. +The finest materials were used, the padding being placed bit by bit in +its place--not in the wholesale fashion of later years, when a sheet or +two of wadding was placed between the sheets of cotton or linen, and a +coarse back-stitching outlined in great scrawling patterns held the +whole together. The old "quilting" work was made in tiny panels, +illustrating shields and other heraldic devices, and had a surface as +fine as carved ivory. When, as in the case of one sample at South +Kensington, the quilt is additionally embroidered with beautiful fine +floss silk flowers, the effect is very lovely. + + + + +VIII + +STUART PICTURES + + + + +VIII + +STUART PICTURES + + "Petit point"--"Stump work"--Royalistic symbols. + + +Though these pictures bear the name of Stuart, many of them are +undoubtedly Tudor. The earliest (if the evidence of costume is of any +value) must have been worked in Elizabeth's time, but as the +authenticated specimens date only from the reign of James I. they are +known as Stuart. The only pictures worked in the early days of this art +were worked in petit-point, the tiny stitch which imitated tapestry, and +very quaint are the specimens left to us. The favourite themes were +entirely pagan. Gods and goddesses disported themselves among leafy +trees. Cupid lightly shot his arrows, the woods were inhabited by an +unknown flora and fauna which seem all its own. The very dogs seem to be +a different species, having more likeness to the china dogs of the +spotted or liver and white variety which the Staffordshire potters made +at the beginning of our own century. Innumerable little castles were +perched in perfectly inaccessible positions on towering crags, and the +laws of perspective were generally conspicuous by their absence. The sun +in those days was a very visible body, and apparently delightful to +work, no Stuart picture being without one; the rolling clouds oftentimes +are confused with the convoluted body of the caterpillar, little +difference being made in the design. The birds were of very brilliant +plumage, and the world was evidently a very gay and sportive place when +these fair ladies spent their leisure over this embroidery! These early +pictures seldom show the religious feeling that afterwards slowly worked +its way through the Stuart days (though, perhaps, disguised under +royalistic symbolism), until in the reign of Queen Anne it became more +or less a fashion, in pictorial needle-craft. It burst out afresh in the +early nineteenth century and became an absolute obsession of the early +Victorian Berlin-wool workers with most disastrous results to both +design and work. + +Until the end of Charles I.'s reign needlework pictures must have been +scarce, as we find one enumerated in the inventory of his "Closet of +Rarities." It is possible that the many pictures which represent Charles +I. were worked by loyalist ladies, _after his execution_ and _during the +Commonwealth_. In many of these pictures his own hair is said to have +been used, thereby becoming relics of him who was known as "the Martyred +King." On a very finely worked portrait of Charles I., at South +Kensington Museum, King Charles's hair is worked amongst the silken +threads. + +[Illustration: KING CHARLES I., WORKED IN FINE SILK EMBROIDERY. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Throughout this time, no matter what the subjects, most of which were +notably striking scenes from Scripture history, such as "Esther and King +Ahasuerus," "Solomon and the Queen of Sheba," "The Judgment of Solomon" +(a very favourite subject), and other scenes of Old Testament history, +all the kings were Charles I. and all the Queens Henrietta Maria. One +and all wore early Stuart costumes. Even Pharaoh's daughter wore the +handsome dress of the day, with Point lace falling collar and real +pearls round her neck. It is a fashion to jeer at this anachronism; but +may it not perhaps be that we take these pictures too literally, and +deny the workers their feelings of passionate devotion to the lost +cause. Doubtless they worked their loyalty to their beloved monarch into +these pretty and pleasing fancies, just as it is said that the fashion +of "finger-bowls" was introduced later so that the loyal gentlemen of +the day might drink to the King "_over the water_." I see no cause to +deny intelligence to these dear dead women, who were capable of +exquisite needlecraft and fine design, and whose devotion was shown in +many instances by giving up jewels, houses, and lands for the King! + +The fashion of "stump" or stamp work appears to have been derived from +Italy. Italian needlework of this time abounds with it, and, it must be +admitted, of a superior design, and style to that which was known here +as "stump" work. Until the eighteenth century English work was more or +less archaic in every branch. Personally, I see no more absurdity in the +queer doll-like figures than in contemporary wood-carving. It was a +period of tentative effort, and was, of course, beneath criticism. +English Art has ever been an effort until its one bright burst of genius +in the eighteenth century, while the continental nations appear to have +breathed artistic perception with life itself. + +The prototype of our stump work pictures, the Italian raised work, are +gracious, graceful figures perfectly proportioned, and set in lovely +elegant arabesques, with no exaggeration of style or period. Some +specimens of this work must have been brought from Italy, through +France, and the English workers quickly adopted and adapted them to +their own heavier intelligence. Some of the little figures are certainly +very grotesque. Frequently the tiny little hands are larger than the +heads, but the _stitchery_ is exquisite. + +No time seems to have been too long to have been spent in perfecting the +petals of a rose, the loose wing of a butterfly, or to make a realistic +curtain in fine Point lace stitches to hang from the King's canopy. Some +of the King's dresses are said to have been made of tiny treasured +pieces of his garments. There is no doubt that much devoted sentiment +was worked into these little figures, and these touches of nature add a +pathetic interest to them. + +[Illustration: SUPERB EXAMPLE OF STUART PICTURE. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +In the illustration of "King Solomon receiving the Queen of Sheba" from +the South Kensington Collection Solomon is obviously King Charles I., +while the Queen of Sheba is equally recognisable as Queen Henrietta +Maria. The picture is perhaps the finest in the Kensington Collection, +the colours being fresh and the work intact. The little faces are +worked over a padding of soft frayed silk or wool, the features being +drawn in fine back-stitch. Natural hair is worked on the King's and +Queen's heads, and the crowns are real gold thread set with pearls. The +canopy is worked _solidly_ in silk and gold thread, and from it hang +loose curtains in old brocade, worked over and over with gold and silken +thread. + +The King's mantle and that of the Lord Chamberlain are worked in Point +lace stitches, afterwards applied to the bodies and hanging loosely. The +Queen's dress is brocade, worked over with gold and silver, while +strings of real pearls decorate the necks and wrists of the ladies, and +real white lace of the Venetian variety trims the neck and sleeves of +these fairy people. The Stuart castle we see perched up among the trees +and touching the sun's beams is more like an English farmhouse than +Whitehall. Yet either this or Windsor Castle is always supposed to be +represented. + +The British lion and the leopard, again, make the identity of these +little people more certain. The quaint little trees bear most +disproportionate fruits, the acorn and pears being about the same size, +but all beautifully worked in Point-lace stitches over wooden moulds. +The hound and the hare, the butterfly and the grub, and the strange +birds make up one of the most typical Stuart pictures. + +The next illustration shows another development of picture-making. Here +the grounding is of white satin, as in the previous illustration, but +the figures are worked on canvas separately, in fine petit-point +stitch, afterwards being cut away and placed on the white satin ground +with a few silk stitches and the whole outlined with a fine black silk +cord. The subject is "The Finding of Moses," and is as full of +anachronisms as the last, only that here again Pharaoh's daughter is +worked in memory of Queen Henrietta Maria, and the tiny boy in the +corner is Charles II., and Moses the infant Duke of York. The +four-winged cherubs are the guardian angels who are watching over the +lost fortunes of the Stuart family, and the rose of England and the lilies +of France which form the border are emblematical of the royal lineage of +their lost King's family. The hound and hare still chase each other +gaily round the border, and in the picture the hare is seen emerging, +like the Stuarts, from exile and obscurity. + +Sufficient has perhaps been said to cause those who possibly may have +misunderstood these pictures to give them another glance, and allow +imagination to carry them back to the times of the exiled Royal Family +and their brave adherents, whose women allowed not their memories to +slumber nor their labours to flag. These pictures must have been made +during the Commonwealth and the reign of Charles II. In no case, to my +knowledge, has King Charles II. been depicted in stitchery, nor yet +Catherine of Braganza. James II. is equally ignored, and with him their +mission seemed to have been accomplished. Possibly the people had had by +this time sufficient of the Stuarts, and the memory of King Charles the +martyr had waxed dim. Certain it is that with James II. Stuart +needlework pictures suddenly ceased. + +[Illustration: STUART PICTURE, SHOWING THE FINDING OF MOSES. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + +_Stump work Symbols._ + +The symbolism of the various animals, birds, insects, and flowers which +are, apparently without rhyme or reason, placed in one great disarray in +the Stuart pictures is said to have been heraldic and symbolic. The +sunbeam coming from a cloud, the white falchion, and the chained hart +are heraldic devices belonging to Edward III. + +The buck and the strawberry, which are so often seen, belong to the +Frazer Clan of Scotland, and may have been worked by ladies who were +kith and kin of this clan. + +The unicorn was the device of James I. and the siren or mermaid of Lady +Frazer, who is said to have worked her own golden hair in the heart of a +Tudor rose on a book cover for James I. + +The hart was also a device of Richard II. and the "broom pod" of the +Plantagenets. The caterpillar and butterfly were specially badges of +Charles I., while the oak-tree and acorn were invariably worked into +every picture in memory of Charles II.'s escape in an oak tree. + + + + +IX + +SAMPLERS + + + + +IX + +SAMPLERS + + Real art work--Specimens in South Kensington Museum--High price + now obtained. + + +A "sampler" is an example or a sample of the worker's skill and +cleverness in design and stitching. When they first appeared, as far as +we know about the middle of the seventeenth century, they were merely a +collection of embroidery, lace, cut and drawn work stitches, and had +little affinity to the samplers of a later date, which seemed especially +ordained to show various patterns of cross stitches, the alphabet, and +the numerals. + +The early samplers were real works of art; they were frequently over a +yard long, not more than a quarter of a yard wide, and were adorned with +as many as thirty different patterns of lace and cut and drawn work. +This extreme narrowness was to enable the sampler to be rolled on a +little ivory stick, like the Japanese _kakemonas_. + +The foundation of all the early samplers was a coarse linen, and to this +fact we owe the preservation of many of them. Those made two hundred +years later, on a coarse, loose canvas, even now show signs of decay, +while these ancient ones on linen are as perfect as when made, only +being gently mellowed by Time to the colour of old ivory. + +The earliest sampler known is dated 1643, and was worked by Elizabeth +Hinde. It is only 6 inches by 6-1/2 inches, and is entirely lacework, +and apparently has been intended for part of a sampler. The worker +perhaps changed her mind and considered rightfully that she had +accomplished her _chef d'oeuvre_, or as so often explains these +unfinished specimens, the Reaper gathered the flower, and only this +dainty piece of stitching was left to perpetuate the memory of Elizabeth +Hinde. + +The sampler in question is just one row of cut and drawn work and +another of fine Venetian lacework, worked in "punto in aria." A lady in +Court dress holds a rose to shield herself from Cupid, a dear little +fellow with wings, who is shooting his dart at her heart. Perhaps poor +Elizabeth Hinde died of it and this is her "swan song." + +[Illustration: A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY "SAMPLER" (ENGLISH), SHOWING CUT +AND DRAWN WORK. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +The earliest samplers appeared to have been worked only on white cotton +or silk. A favourite design, apart from the lacework samplers, was the +"damask pattern" sampler, a specimen of which may be noted, commencing +with the fifth row, on the sampler illustrated. Sometimes the sampler +was entirely composed of it, and although ineffective, remains as a +marvel of skill. It was worked entirely in flat satin stitch and eyelet +holes, known as the "bird's eye" pattern. In the illustration four rows +of cutwork will be noted, followed by five rows of drawn threadwork, +and above are patterns worked in floral and geometric designs in +coloured silks. The alphabet and the date 1643 complete this monument of +skill, which may be seen in the South Kensington Museum. + +The succeeding illustration shows a more ambitious attempt, and is +considered one of the finest specimens known. It was worked by Elizabeth +Mackett, 1696. It is on white linen with ten rows of floral patterns +worked with coloured silks in cross, stem, and satin stitches, with some +portions worked separately and applied. Five rows of white satin stitch, +two rows of alphabet letters in coloured silks, and four rows of +exquisite punto in aria lace patterns are followed by the alphabet again +in white stitches and the maker's name and date. The sampler is in +superb preservation, the colours are particularly rich and well chosen. +This sampler is also from the South Kensington Collection. Often the +worker's name is followed by a verse or rhyme having a delightfully +prosaic tendency. One can imagine the poor girls, in the early days we +are writing of, writhing under the infliction of having slowly and +painstakingly to work the solemn injunction-- + + "When this you see remember me + And keep me in your mind, + And be not like a weathercock + That turns at every wind. + + When I am dead and laid in grave, + And all my bones are rotten, + By this you may remember me + When I should be forgotten." + +And we can appreciate how little Maggie Tulliver ("The Mill on the Floss") +must have girded at the philosophy she was compelled to work into her +sampler-- + + "Look well to what you take in hand, + For learning is better than house or land; + When land is gone and money is spent + Then learning is most excellent." + +With the eighteenth century the beauty of the Samplers distinctly +declined. They became squarer, and were bordered with a running pattern, +and the whole canvas became more or less pictorial. Inevitably the end +of this art came. Ugly realistic bowpots with stumpy trees decorated the +picture in regular order. The alphabet still appeared, and moral +reflection seemed to be the aim of the worker rather than to make the +Sampler show beauty of stitchery. Quaint little maps of England are +often seen, surrounded with floral borders, but it remained to the early +nineteenth century to show how the Sampler became reduced to absurdity. +One of the quaintest and most amusing Samplers at South Kensington is a +12-inch by 8-inch example in woollen canvas and embroidered with +coloured silk. At the lower end is a soldier, a tiny realistic house, a +dovecot, any number of flowering plants, a stag and other animals. Above +is a band of worked embroidery enclosing the words, "This is my dear +Father." The remaining spaces are filled in with angels blowing +trumpets, double-headed eagle, peacocks and other birds, and baskets of +fruit. In spite of its absurdity, this little piece is far more +pleasant than the tombstone inscriptions which abound, and is, after +all, delightfully suggestive of home and affection. + +[Illustration: EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER," SHOWING EMBROIDERY IN COLOURED +SILK. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +[Illustration: EARLY ENGLISH "SAMPLER," SHOWING BIRD'S-EYE EMBROIDERY +AND CUT AND DRAWN WORK. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Another quaint piece at South Kensington is a sampler worked by poor +Harriet Taylor, _aged seven!_ At the top are four flying angels, two in +clouds flanking a crown beneath the letters "G. R." In the middle stands +a flower-wreathed arch, with columns holding vases of flowering plants; +above are the words, "The Temple of Fancy," and within an enclosed space +the following homily: + + "Not Land but Learning + Makes a man complete + Not Birth but Breeding + Makes him truly Great + Not Wealth but Wisdom + Does adorn the State + Virtue not Honor + Makes him Fortunate + Learning, Breeding, Wisdom + Get these three + Then Wealth and Honor + Will attend on thee." + +Then follows a house called "The Queen's Palace," standing in an +enclosed flower-garden. This masterpiece of moral philosophy from the +hands of a child of seven years is dated 1813. + +An exaggerated conception of the value of old Samplers is very widely +spread. Only the seventeenth-century Samplers are really of consequence, +and these fetch fancy prices. In the sale-rooms a long narrow Sampler +of lace stitches and drawn-thread work would bring as much as a +handsome piece of lace. They are practically unattainable, and in this +case the law of supply and demand does not obtain. It is beyond the +needlewomen of the present day to imitate these old Samplers. Life is +too short, and demands upon time are so many and varied, that a lifetime +of work would result in making only one. Therefore, the fortunate owners +of these seventeenth-century Samplers may cherish their possessions, and +those less lucky possess their souls in patience, and hoard their golden +guineas in the hope of securing one. Twenty years ago a few pounds would +have been ample to secure a fine specimen, but L30 will now secure only +a short fragment. + +During the last three years I have not seen a good Sampler at any London +Curio or lace shop, and none appear in the sale-rooms. The +eighteenth-century Samplers are comparatively common, the map variety +especially so, and can be purchased for a pound or so, but these are not +desirable to the collector. + + + + +X + +THE WILLIAM AND MARY EMBROIDERIES + + +[Illustration: JACOBEAN WALL-HANGING WORKED IN COLOURED CREWELS ON LINEN +GROUND. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + + + + +X + +THE WILLIAM AND MARY EMBROIDERIES + + Queen Mary "a born needlewoman"--The Hampton Court + Embroideries--Revival of petit point--Jacobean hangings. + + +One of the most convincing facts in arguments that there _is_ a revival +in the gentle art of needlecraft is that it has become the fashion to +drape our windows, cover our furniture, and panel our walls with printed +copies of the Old Jacobean needlework. Many people, knowing nothing +whatever about the history of needlework, wonder where the designs for +the printed linens which line the windows of Messrs. Liberty, Goodall +and Burnett's colossal frontages in Regent Street have been found. In +time amazement gives way to admiration for these quaint blues and +greens, roses and pale yellows, worked in great scrolls with exotic +flowers and still more exotic birds, and the funny little hillocks with +delightful little pagoda-like cottages nestling amongst them, and many +and various little animals which seem to keep perpetual holiday under +the everlasting blooms. The designs are taken bodily from the +historical hangings of the later seventeenth century. After the +abdication and flight of James II. to St. Germains, his daughter Mary +came over with her Dutch husband, William the Stadtholder--or, rather, +William came over and brought his wife, the daughter of the late king, +for William had no intention of assuming the style and life of Prince +Consort, but came well to the front, and kept there. It was not +"VICTORIA _and Albert_" in those days, but WILLIAM and MARY, who ruled +England, and ruled it well. William III. must have been a man of strong +personality, and he managed to quell all the rebellions of his reign, +and during the time he ruled over us the country settled down to a +peaceful state that has remained to the present time. + +Queen Mary had quite sufficient employment in settling herself and her +household, and generally managing the domestic matters pertaining to the +new kingdom she had come into. She apparently had a very free hand in +rebuilding Hampton Court, which she particularly made her home, +absolutely pulling the interior down, and rebuilding and redecorating it +according to her own taste, which was not that of the Stuart persuasion +with its gorgeous magnificence, but the more homely and solid Dutch. +Very little of the original Hampton Court _interior_, built and +furnished by Cardinal Wolsey, exists. Just here and there we find +delightfully dark little dens with the original linen-fold panellings +and ceilings that are a ravishment to look upon; but mostly the rooms +are high, plain-panelled, and with the quaint ingle-nook fireplaces, +with shelves above, upon which Mary placed her lovely "blue and white" +porcelain which had been brought to her by the Dutch merchants who at +that time were the great traders of the sea. + +[Illustration: ENLARGEMENT OF "JACOBEAN" SPRAY. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Queen Mary ought to be regarded as the patron saint of English +needlewomen. She was happiest when employed furnishing every +bed-covering, every chair and stool, and supplying the hangings for her +favourite home. It is said that she spent her days over her embroidery +frame, knowing full well that affairs of State were in the capable hands +of her husband. + +There are few relics left of her handiwork outside Hampton Court. She +left no dainty little book-covers, bags, or boxes, as her ideas were +fixed on larger pieces of embroidery. Had she lived in the Berlin-wool +picture days, she would have filled every nook and cranny with these +atrocities, as many humbler devotees to the needle have done to our own +knowledge. Needlework can become a _passion_, and certainly Queen Mary +must have possessed it. + +After the complete collapse of the Stuart stump pictures, when every +vestige of loyalty seems to have been swept away with the hated James +II., the ancient Petit Point pictures came back into fashion. Very +clever work was put into them, but, alas! their scope was purely to +depict religious scenes of the rigorous kind. No dainty fairy-like +little people now ruled in pictured story, but actual representations of +Bible history. + +The illustration of "The Baptism of the Ethiopian Eunuch by St. Philip" +is a fair sample of the needlework picture of this time. The picture is +a strange mixture of the early Stuart Petit Point, the Jacobean +wall-hanging, and the newly revived religious spirit. The duck-pond, the +swans and the water-plants might have been copied bodily from James I.'s +time. The paroquet and the flying bird, and the immense leaves and +blossoms, are direct from the wall-hangings, while the figures only too +surely foretell the coming dark days of needlecraft, when a Scripture +picture and a coarsely worked sampler were part of every girl's liberal +education. The work in this picture is extremely good, and it is +excruciatingly funny without intending to be so. The pretty little +equipage with its diminutive ponies surely was never intended to carry +either St. Philip or the Eunuch! The open book, with Hebraic +inscription, is very delightful. It brings to mind the Tables of the Law +rather than the light reading that the charming little Cinderella coach +should carry. + +These pictures are not common, and we scarcely know whether to be +thankful for them or not. Unlike the early petit point, they were worked +in _worsteds_, whereas the early pictures were wrought in silk. The moth +has a natural affinity for wool, as we all know, and his tribe has +cleared off many hundreds of examples. Why so many of the old Jacobean +hangings remain is that they were worked for _use_, and not ornament, +and even after they ceased to be fashionable ornaments for sitting and +bed rooms, they were either relegated to the servants' quarters, or +given to dependants, who used them constantly, shaking and keeping +them in repair, as the eighteenth-century housewives liked to keep their +homes swept and garnished. + +[Illustration: NEEDLEWORK PICTURE OF QUEEN ANNE PERIOD. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +It is strange to see these old Jacobean hangings (perhaps the drapery of +the now tabooed four-post bedstead), which might some thirty years ago +have been carried off for the asking, sell at Christie's for L800, as +happened in the dispersal of the Massey-Mainwaring sale last year. Even +a panel of no use except to frame as a picture, say 4 feet by 3 feet, +will fetch L30 and a full-sized bed-cover can only be bought for over +L100. The reason is not far to seek. The colouring and the drawing of +this fine old Crewel-work are exquisite (even though the design savours +of the grotesque), and Time has dealt very leniently with the dyes. I +endeavoured to match some of these old worsteds a little time ago, and +though able to find the colours, could not get the tone. After much +tribulation I was advised to hang the skeins of worsted on the trees in +the garden and _forget all about them_, and certainly wind and weather +have softened the somewhat garish worsteds to the soft, _fade_ colours +of the old work. + +The same class of embroidery was executed during the reign of Queen +Anne, though she herself did little of it. Costly silks and brocades and +Venetian laces were the dress of the day, and no little dainty +accessories appear to have been made. + + + + +XI + +PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY + + +[Illustration: A FINE "PAINTED FACE" SILK-EMBROIDERED PICTURE. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XI + +PICTORIAL NEEDLEWORK OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY + + The "painted faces" period--Method of production--Revival of + Scriptural "motifs"--Modern fakes--Black silk and hair copies + of engravings. + + +An immense number of pictures must have been worked during the +eighteenth century. Almost, we might say, no English home is without an +example. Much of the work is intensely bad, and only that Time has +tenderly softened the colours, and the old-time dresses add an element +of quaintness to the pictures, can they be tolerated. Works of art they +are not, and, indeed, were never intended to occupy the place their +owners now proudly claim for them. Just here and there a picture of the +painted face type is a masterpiece of stitchery, as in the example +illustrated, where every thread has been worked by an _artiste_. Looking +at this little gem across a room, the effect is that of a charming old +colour print, so tenderly are the lines of shading depicted. This is the +only picture of this class that I have seen for years as an absolutely +perfect specimen of the eighteenth-century silk pictures, though +doubtless many exist. + +The discrepancy which is usually found is that, although the design and +outline is perfect, the faces and hands exquisitely painted, the +needlework part of the picture has been executed in a foolish, +inartistic manner, and no method of light and shade has been observed. +Some little time ago I published an article in one of the popular +monthly Magazines illustrating this same picture, and was afterwards +inundated with letters from correspondents from far and near sending +their pictures for valuation and--admiration! Not one of these pictures +was good, though there were varying degrees of _badness_. But in no +instance was the painted face crudely drawn or badly coloured. + +The explanation is that just as the modern needlewoman goes to a +Needlework Depot and obtains pieces of embroidery already commenced and +the design of the whole drawn ready for completion, so these old needle +pictures were sold ready for embroidering, the outline of the trees +sketched in fine sepia lines, the distant landscape already painted, the +faces and hands of the figures charmingly coloured, in many instances by +first-class artists. When we remember that the eighteenth century was +_par excellence_ the great period of English portrait painting and +colour printing, we can understand that possibly really fine artists +were willing to paint these exquisite faces on fine silk and satin, just +as good artists of the present day often paint "pot-boilers" while +waiting for fame. + +[Illustration: EMBROIDERED SILK PICTURE OF "THE LAST SUPPER." + +Eighteenth Century. + +(_S.K.M. Collection._)] + +Angelica Kauffmann's style was often copied. Is it too much to believe +that some of these charming faces may have been from her hands? We know +that she painted furniture and china, therefore why not the faces of the +needlework pictures so nearly akin to her own work? + +The eighteenth-century costume was particularly adapted to this pretty +work. We cannot imagine the voluminous robes of Queen Mary or Queen Anne +in needle-stitchery, but the soft, silky lawns of the Georgian periods, +the high-waisted bodices, the _bouffant_ fichus and the flowing +head-dresses, all were specially easy and graceful to work. Many of the +pretty children Sir Joshua loved to paint were copied. "Innocence" made +a charming picture, and several of the less rustic Morland pictures were +copied. + +We would imagine that when the beginnings of the picture were so +glorious the needlewoman would have made some endeavour to work up to +it. But, alas! it was not so. Though often the stitching is neat and +small, not an idea of shading seems to have entered the worker's mind, +and whole spaces, nay, a complete garment, are often worked solid in one +tone of colour! On the whole there is far more artistic sense and +feeling in the Stump pictures it is the fashion to deride. + +Not always were dainty pastoral and domestic scenes worked. Very ghastly +creations are still existent of scriptural subjects. Coarsely worked in +wool, instead of silk, or in a mixture of both. The painting is still +good, but the work and the subjects are execrable! "Abraham about to +sacrifice Isaac," on the pile of faggots already laid, and Isaac bound +on it, with a very woolly lamb standing ready as a substitute, was a +favourite subject. "Abraham dismissing Hagar and Ishmael," with a +malignant-looking Sarah in the distance, vies with the former in +popularity. "The Woman of Samaria," and "The Entombment," are another +pair of unpleasant pictures which we are often called upon to admire. + +The best of these pictures were worked in fine floss silk, not quite +like the floss silk of to-day, as it had more twist and body in it, with +just a little fine chenille, and very tiny bits of silver thread to +heighten the effect. The worst were worked in _crewel_ wools of crude +colours. Fortunately, the moth has a special predilection for these +pictures, and they are slowly being eaten out of existence, in spite of +being cherished as heirlooms and works of art. + +Another pretty style which we seldom meet with was some part of the +picture covered with the almost obsolete "aerophane," a kind of chiffon +or crape which was much in request even up to fifty years ago. A certain +part of the draperies was worked on the silk ground, without any attempt +at finish. This was covered with aerophane, and outlined so as to attach +it to the figure. This again was worked upon with very happy effects, +very fine darning stitches making the requisite depth of shading. The +illustration shows the use of this, but this cannot be said to be a very +good specimen. + +[Illustration: "PAINTED FACE" SILK-EMBROIDERED PICTURE. + +Eighteenth Century. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + +These painted face, silk-worked pictures are the only needlework +examples the collector _need to beware of_, as they are being reproduced +by the score. The method of working in the poorer specimens is very +simple, and it pays the "faker" to sell for L2 or L3 what takes, +perhaps, only half a day to produce. When a well-executed picture is +produced it is worth money, but so far I have seen none, except at the +Royal School of Needlework, where the copying of old pictures of the +period is exceedingly well done, and not intended to deceive. The +prices, however, are almost prohibitive, as no modern needlework picture +is worth from L15 to L30. They are, after all, only copies, and in no +sense of the word works of art. + +During the eighteenth century, also, a fashion set in of adorning +engravings with pieces of cloth, silk, and tinsel. At best it was a +stupid fancy, and was responsible for the destruction of many fine old +mezzotints and coloured prints. The hands, face, and background of an +engraving were cut out, and pasted on a sheet of cardboard, pieces of +some favourite brocaded gown, perhaps, were attached to the neck and +shoulders, tiny lace tuckers were inserted, and gorgeous jewellery was +simulated by wretched bits of tinsel trimming. The realism of the Stuart +stump picture was never so atrocious as this baleful invention, which +was as meretricious as a waxwork show. + +Not so popular, but far better, were the pictures worked on white silk +with black silk and hair. There were no artistic aspirations about +these--they were copies in black and white of the engravings of the +day, just as a pen-and-ink or pencil copy might be made. Very dainty +stitchery was put in them, the stronger parts of the lines being in fine +black silk, the finer and more distant being worked in human hair of +various shades from black to brown. Occasionally golden and even white +hair is used, and the effect is often that of a faded engraving. The +silk ground on which these little pictures were worked is, however, +often cracked with age, and many pretty specimens are ruined. The +illustration shows an example of the type of picture, and depicts +"Charlotte weeping over the Tomb of Werther." + +[Illustration: BLACK SILK AND HAIR PICTURE. + +Imitation of Engraving. Eighteenth Century. + +(_Author's Collection._)] + + + + +XII + +NEEDLEWORK PICTURES OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY + + + + +XII + +NEEDLEWORK PICTURES OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY + + Entire decline of needlework as an art--Miss Linwood's + invention!--The Berlin-wool pictures--Lack of efficient + instruction--Waste of magnificent opportunity at South + Kensington Museum. + + +It were kindest to ignore 19th century needlework, but in a book +treating of English embroidery something must be said to bridge over the +time when Needlecraft as an Art was _dead_. During the earlier part of +the century taste was bad, during the middle it was beyond criticism, +and from then to the time of the "greenery-yallery" aesthetic revival all +and everything made by woman's fingers ought to be buried, burnt, or +otherwise destroyed. Indeed, if that drastic process could be carried +out from the time good Queen Adelaide reigned to the early "eighties" we +might not, now and ever, have to bow our heads in utter abjection. + +The originator and moving spirit of this bad period was Miss Linwood, +who conceived the idea of copying oil paintings in woolwork. She died +in 1845. Would that she had never been born! When we think of the many +years which English women have spent over those wickedly hideous +Berlin-wool pictures, working their bad drawing and vilely crude colours +into those awful canvases, and imagining that they were earning undying +fame as notable women for all the succeeding ages, death was too good +for Miss Linwood. The usual boiling oil would have been a fitter end! +Miss Linwood made a great _furore_ at the time of her invention, and +held an exhibition in the rooms now occupied by Messrs. Puttick & +Simpson, Leicester Square. Can we not imagine the shade of the great Sir +Joshua Reynolds, whose home and studio these rooms had been, revisiting +the glimpses of the moon, and while wandering up and down that famous +old staircase forsaking his home for ever after one horrified glance at +Miss Linwood's invention? + +Not only Miss Linwood, but Mrs. Delany and Miss Knowles made themselves +famous for Berlin-wool pictures. The kindest thing to say is that the +specimens which are supposed to have been worked by their own hands are +considerably better than those of the half-dozen generations of their +followers. During the middle and succeeding twenty years of the +nineteenth century the notable housewife of every class amused herself, +at the expense of her mind, by working cross-stitch pictures with +crudely coloured wools (royal blue and rose-pink, magenta, +emerald-green, and deep crimson were supposed to represent the actual +colours of Nature), on very coarse canvas. Landseer's paintings were +favourite studies, "Bolton Abbey in the Olden Times" lending itself to a +choice range of violent colours and striking incidents. Nothing was too +sacred for the Berlin-wool worker to lay hands upon. "The Crucifixion," +"The Nativity," "The Flight into Egypt," "The Holy Family" were not only +supposed to show the skill of the worker, but also the proper frame of +mind the embroideress possessed. Pleasing little horrors such as the +"Head of the Saviour in His Agony," and that of the Virgin with all her +tortured mother love in her eyes were considered fit ornaments for +drawing-room, which by the way were also adorned with wool and cotton +crochet antimacassars, waxwork flowers under glass, and often +astonishingly good specimens of fine Chelsea, Worcester, and Oriental +china. + +Never was the questions of how "having eyes and yet seeing not" more +fully exemplified. The nation abounded in paintings, prints, fine +needlework, and the product of our greatest period of porcelain +manufacture. Fine examples were at hand everywhere. Exquisite prints +belonging to our only good period, the eighteenth century, were common; +yet rather than try their skill in copying these, the needlewomen, who +possessed undoubted skill, enthusiasm, and infinite patience, preferred +to copy realistic paintings of the Landseer school and the highly +coloured prints of the Baxter and Le Blond period. + +Unfortunately, the craze is by no means buried. Within the last twelve +months I was invited to see the "works" of a wonderful needlewoman in a +little Middlesex village. The local clergyman and doctor were +sufficiently benighted even in these days of universal culture to admire +her work, and her fame had spread. Room after room was filled with 10 by +8-feet canvases; every drawer in the house was crammed with the result +of this clever woman's work--for clever she undoubtedly was. After +exhausting all the known subjects of Landseer and his school, she had +struck out a line for herself, and had copied the _Graphic_ and +_Illustrated London News_ Supplements of the stirring scenes from the +South African War, such as "The Siege of Ladysmith," "The Death of the +Prince Imperial" in all its gruesome local colouring, were worked on +gigantic canvases. Her great _chef d'oeuvre_ was, however, the +memorial statue of Queen Victoria, copied from the _Graphic_ Supplement +_in tones of black, white, and grey_, a most clever piece of work; +but--well, she was happy and more than delighted with my perfectly +honest remark that I had _never seen anything like it_! + +Ah! if only this dear woman and the many others who are wasting their +time and eyesight over fashions which perish could only be reached and +aroused by the influence of the lovely old English stitchery of our +great period! If only the purblind authorities and custodians of our +National collections could awaken to the infinite possibilities which +they hold, once again "Opus Anglicum" might rule the world, and the +labour of even one woman's life might be of lasting value. It is useless +to refer to the many schools of embroidery there are in different parts +of the country, where fine work is being done on the best lines. These +schools, from the Royal School of Needlework downwards, are "closed +corners," and no attempt is made to reach the great public. The Royal +School of Needlework is maintained by no subsidy as it ought to be, but +by the many ladies of position and taste who liberally support it, both +for the instruction and employment of "ladies of reduced circumstances," +and for _the disposal of its work at very high prices_. Other schools in +town are simply private adventure institutions, run at a considerable +profit to the principals. + +The superb collection at South Kensington might as well be buried in the +crypt of Westminster Cathedral for all the value it is to the general +public. There is not the slightest attempt to allow these unique pieces +of "Opus Anglicum" to point a moral or adorn a tale. The magnificent +copes and vestments, of which there are some score, are merely +tabulated, paragraphed, and photographed, and there is an end of them. +During my constant visits to these treasures of English Art I have not +once discovered another interested visitor amongst these beautiful +vestments; and the officials, when interviewed, though perfectly +courteous, apparently resent inquiries; and woe betide the unfortunate +inquirers who _might_ have found the required information from the tiny +little printed card hidden either too low or too high in the dark +recesses of the corridors, and so spared these _savants_ the trouble of +an interview! + +Why a continuous course of lectures on this and every kindred Art +subject is not made compulsory at the Victoria and Albert Museum is one +of the burning questions of the hour among the cultured collectors of +the day. The custodians are supposed to be men of special insight in the +branches over which they preside, yet for all the advantage to the +public they might as well be waxwork dummies. What we want as a nation +is "culture while we wait," and writ so large that those who run may +read, and until this consummation is attained we shall ever remain in +the Slough of Despond, and Art for Art's sake will continue dead. + + + + +XIII + +EMBROIDERY IN "COSTUME" + + + + +XIII + +EMBROIDERY IN "COSTUME" + + Early Greek garments--Biblical references to + embroidery--Ecclesiastical garments--Eighteenth-century + dresses, coats, and waistcoats--Muslin embroideries. + + +The subject of Costume has been most admirably treated in another volume +of this series, but a reference must be made to it as affecting our +topic, English Embroidery, as costume has played no little part in its +history. + +From the earliest ages embroidery has been used to decorate garments. +The ancient Greeks embroidered the hems of their graceful draperies in +the well-known Greek fret and other designs so invariably seen on the +old Greek vases. The legend that Minerva herself taught the Greeks the +art of embroidery illustrates how deeply the art was understood; and the +pretty story told by an old botanist of how the foxglove came by its +name and its curious bell-like flowers is worth repeating. In the old +Greek days, when gods and goddesses were regarded as having the +attributes of humanity in addition to those of deities, Juno was one +day amusing herself with making tapestry, and, after the manner of the +people, put a thimble on her finger. Jupiter, "playing the rogue with +her," took her thimble and threw it away, and down it dropped to the +earth. The goddess was very wroth, and in order to pacify her Jupiter +turned the thimble into a flower, which now is known as Digitalis, or +finger-stole. + +This little fairy tale can scarcely be taken as proof conclusive of the +existence of either needle tapestry or thimble use, but its telling may +amuse the reader. + +In all ancient histories we find continuous references to the +embroidered garment worn by its people. It was well recognised that no +material was sufficiently beautiful not to be further embellished with +rich embroideries. In the Psalms we find that "Pharaoh's daughter shall +be brought to the king in a raiment of needlework," and that "her +clothing is of wrought gold." + +Phrygia was above all the country most noted for embroideries of gold, +and for many years the name "Phrygian embroidery" was sufficient to +describe any highly decorated specimen. It is said that the name of the +vestment or trimming, the "orphry" is derived from the word +"Auri-phrygium," meaning "gold of Phrygian embroidery." + +The Phrygians are credited with having taught the Egyptians the art, +while the Hebrews, while sojourning in the land of Egypt, learned the +art from their captors, and carried it with them all through their +journeys to the Promised Land, and their final settlement in Palestine. +The mention of gold and purple embroideries, both as garments and +hangings, is conspicuous throughout all Bible history. The Egyptian and +Greek arts are in almost all respects concurrent. The Phoenicians +carried examples of each country's work from one to another. After the +conquest of Greece the Romans absorbed her art, and developed it in +their own special style. They in turn carried their arts and crafts to +Gaul and Britain, and by degrees needlecraft permeated the whole of +Europe. + +Dealing with the embroidered costumes of our own country, the ancient +records, illuminated Missals, and other contemporary data show that very +sumptuous were both the ecclesiastical and lay garments. Heavy gold +embroideries were worked on the hems of skirts and mantles. The Kings' +coronation robes and mantles were beautiful specimens of handicraft, +often after a king's death being given to the churches for vestments. +From Anglo-Saxon to Norman times extensive use was made of the work of +the needle for clothing, but after the Conquest till quite late in the +Tudor period little has been found to throw light upon the use of +embroidery for the lay dress of the time. All woman's taste and energy +seem to have been devoted to make monumental embroideries for church +use. + +It was, indeed, not until the gorgeous period of Henry VIII. that +embroidery, as distinct from garment-making, appeared; and then +everything became an object worthy of decoration. Much fine stitchery +was put into the fine white undergarments of that time, and the +overdresses of both men and women became stiff with gold thread and +jewels. Much use was made of slashing and quilting, the point of +junction being dotted with pearls and precious stones. Noble ladies wore +dresses heavily and richly embroidered with gold, and the train was so +weighty that train-bearers were pressed into service. In the old +paintings the horses belonging to kings and nobles wear trappings of +heavily embroidered gold. Even the hounds who are frequently represented +with their masters have collars massively decorated with gold bullion. + +The skirts of the ladies of this time were thickly encrusted with +jewels, folds of silk being crossed in a kind of lattice-work, each +crossing being fixed with a pearl or jewel, and a similar precious stone +being inserted in the square formed by the trellis. The long stomachers +were one gleaming mass of jewelled embroidery, the tiny caps or +headdresses being likewise heavily studded with gems. + +During the reign of Charles I. a much daintier style of dress appeared. +Velvet and silken suits were worn by the men, handsomely but +appropriately trimmed with the fine "punto in aria" or Reticella laces +of Venice; and in this and the three succeeding reigns dress was of +sumptuous velvets, satins, and heavy silks, unembroidered, but trimmed, +and in Charles II.'s time _loaded_ with costly laces. It will be noted +that whenever lace is in the ascendant, embroidery suffers, as is +quite natural. Lace itself is sufficient adornment for fine raiment. + +[Illustration: _Photo by E. Gray, Bayswater._ + +MRS. TICKELL AND HER SISTER, MRS. SHERIDAN, BY GAINSBOROUGH, SHOWING HOW +LACE WAS SUPERSEDED BY FILMY MUSLINS. + +(_Dulwich Gallery._)] + +As the use of the fine Venetian and Flemish and French laces declined, +and tuckers and frillings of Mechlin, Valenciennes, and Point +d'Angleterre appeared, the use of embroidery asserted itself, and the +pretty satins and daintily coloured silks of William and Mary, Queen +Anne, and more specially the earlier Georges, began to be embroidered in +a specially delicate fashion. Fine floss silk was used in soft +colourings, and whole surfaces were covered with tiny embroidered sprays +of natural-coloured flowers. Really exquisite stitchery was put into the +graceful honeysuckle, the pansy, carnation, and rose clusters which +decorated the dresses. The bodices, sacques, and skirts of the early +eighteenth-century ladies were embroidered with real artistic taste and +feeling. Some of the old dresses kept at South Kensington show the +exquisite specimens of this class of needlework; while the coats and +waistcoats of the sterner sex are not a whit behind the feminine +garments in beauty. The long waistcoats were most frequently made of +cream, pale blue, or white silk or satin, delightfully embroidered with +tiny sprays of blossoms, and fastened with fine old paste buttons; while +the coat, frequently of brocade, was heavily embroidered down the front +with three or four inches of solid embroidery of foliage and flowers, +oftentimes mixed with gold and silver threads. The tiny cravat of +Mechlin, cuff ruffles, knee breeches, silken hose, and buckled shoes, +along with the powdered hair, complete a costume that has never been +equalled, either before or afterwards, in beauty, grace, and elegance. +During the William IV. and the long Victorian period, with the exception +of a very fine embroidery on muslin, in the earlier part of it, nothing +but fine stitchery for the use of underwear was made, if we except the +hundreds and thousands of yards of cut and buttonholed linen which +seemed to have been the solace and delight of our grandmothers when they +allowed themselves to be torn away from their beloved Berlin-wool work. +To sit on a cushion and sew a fine seam appears to have been the +amusement of the properly constituted women of the early and +mid-nineteenth century. + + + + +XIV + +SALE PRICES + + + + +XIV + +SALE PRICES + + +Ancient embroideries so seldom come into the salerooms that it is rarely +an opportunity occurs for obtaining market prices, therefore Lady +Wolseley's sale on July 12, 1906, must be accepted as a standard. +Immense prices are asked at the antique shops, the dealers apparently +basing their prices on this sale by auction and _doubling_ them. I have +visited every shop in the trade in search of prices for this book before +procuring the auctioneer's catalogue, and was aghast at the terrific +sums asked for oftentimes indifferent specimens in comparison to what +was paid in the auction-room. During the past year anything from L15 +15s. to L40 has been paid at Christie's for specimens of varying degrees +of perfection of work and condition. The latter state is even of greater +importance than the first, as no matter how good the work originally, if +discoloured and frayed, prices go down and down. Nearly all the finest +specimens of the Stump-work period are marred by the tarnishing of the +gold and silver threads. Instead of these being a glory and a great +enhancement to the embroidery, they prove a great disfigurement, and +thereby cause a considerable reduction in value. + +The earlier petit point pictures, having little or no bullion in their +execution (and when cared for and not exposed to too much sunlight), +have kept their condition very well, and now are quite the favourite +kind for collection. It speaks much for the quality of the silks used +and the dyes of nearly three hundred years ago that the fugitive greens +and blues and delicate roses in these little works of art, as in the +superb tapestries of the same date, should be as fine as when made, +whereas to-day's colours are as fleeting as the glories of the rainbow. + + * * * * * + +The following are the principal prices in Lady Wolseley's sale: + + L s. d. + +A small bag, red and gold brocade 2 15 0 + +A small bag or purse 5 0 0 + +A fine bead book-cover 6 0 0 + +Same, trimmed with silver lace (Harris) 6 16 0 + +A pair of embroidered shoes (Harris) 6 0 0 + +A small pocket-book, silk embroidery on +silver ground 8 17 6 + +A pair of Stuart shoes 9 19 6 + +A stumpwork picture, a most curious globe, +showing Europe, Asia, Africa, and America, +1648 (S. G. Fenton) 24 0 0 + +A double book of Psalms, embroidered binding +with Tudor rose 23 10 0 + +A petit point picture, 12-1/2 x 9-1/2 11 11 0 + +A small picture, partly sketched and partly +worked 4 14 6 + +A Stuart stump picture, 18 x 15-1/2 18 18 0 + +A Stuart stump picture, King under canopy, +17-1/2 x 14 14 14 6 + +A Stuart bullion picture, vase, in +tortoiseshell frame, 23 x 18 8 8 0 + +Same, with Herodias's daughter and John the +Baptist 5 5 0 + +A portrait of Henry, Prince of Wales, in +flat-stitch on rose satin 21 0 0 + +Another on satin, "Bathsheba," spangled, +17 x 13 6 16 0 + +Another on satin, birds on gold and silver, +13 x 13 (Harris) 13 13 6 + +A bead picture, 15 x 11 11 11 0 + +A stump and bead picture, 12 x 11 12 1 6 + +A small book-cover, 14 x 8 13 12 0 + +A Stuart stump picture, figures and silver +fountain, tortoiseshell frame, 22 x 16 15 15 0 + +A stump picture, lady with coral necklace, +18 x 12 23 10 0 + +A stump picture, lady under arch with a +black swan, 20 x 16 (Stoner) 34 0 0 + +A stump picture, King Charles as Ahasuerus +with Haman and Mordecai, and pearl-embroidered +carpet, 23 x 17 28 0 0 + +A stump picture, lady under a canopy, large +pearls, 13 x 19, (Stoner) 34 0 0 + +A Stuart Petit Point picture, Abraham and +Hagar 16 16 0 + +A Stuart petit point picture, "Judgment of +Paris," 24 x 17 25 0 0 + +A Stuart petit point picture, King Solomon +and Queen of Sheba 18 18 0 + +A beadwork picture, lady and gentleman, lion +and unicorn, 21 x 17 12 12 6 + +An embroidered picture, "Peter denying +Christ," 24 x 17 (S. G. Fenton) 9 19 6 + +A petit point picture, lake with boats and +figures, 15 x 12 (Harris) 14 14 6 + +A large stump picture, with horse and rider +and figures of four seasons 30 10 0 + +A stumpwork picture, four figures, castle +and birds and flowers (S. G. Fenton) 33 0 0 + +A picture sketched on white satin, not worked 4 15 0 + +A Stuart picture on canvas 9 19 6 + +A fine Stuart jewel-casket, numerous secret +drawers, covered in needlework (S. G. Fenton) 47 5 0 + +A Stuart box, covered with bullion-work +(S. G. Fenton) 12 12 0 + +A Stuart box, with embroidery and pearls +(Spero) 16 16 0 + +A Stuart box, coloured bullion, 10 x 6 9 9 0 + +An embroidered box, with portrait on lid +(S. G. Fenton) 53 11 0 + +A Stuart mirror, covered with stump +embroidery, representing Charles I. and his +Queen (illustrated), (Rosthron) 102 18 0 + +Another mirror, with painted and embroidered +figures (Harris) 34 0 0 + +A Charles I. mirror in old lace and gold +frame, with borders in embroidery, with +portrait, castle, and floral decoration 40 0 0 + +3 yds. 13 inches long, 12 inches deep, +Cornice in Petit Point, Christie's, +July, 1908 (Harris) 204 15 0 + + + + +XV + +CONCLUSION + + + + +XV + +CONCLUSION + + +Needlework as a national art is as dead as the proverbial door-nail; +whether or not it ever regains its position as a craft is a matter of +conjecture. Personally, I incline to the belief that it is absolutely +extinct. The death-knell rang for all time when the sewing-machine was +invented. The machine has been a very doubtful blessing, as it has +allowed even the art of stitchery in ordinary work to slide into the +limbo of forgotten things. What woman now knows what it is to +"back-stitch" a shirt cuff, for instance, drawing a thread for guidance, +and carefully going back two or three threads in order to make a neat, +firm line of stitching? The sewing-machine does all this, and _does_ it +_well_, a clever machinist turning out more work in a week than a +seamstress in a year. If this were all, it would be no matter for +regret, but with the necessity for needlework has vanished the desire. +The lady quoted in Green's History is now non-existent. "She was a +pattern of sobriety unto many, very seldom seen abroad except at +church; when others recreated themselves at holidays and other times, +she would take her needlework, and say, 'Here is my recreation.'" + +In spite of the many Schools of Embroidery, with a few notable +exceptions, nothing is done to raise the standard of embroidery above +making miserable little cushion-covers, table-centres, and suchlike +pretty fripperies for the temporary adornment of the house. The women of +Germany, Holland, Sweden, Italy, on the contrary, take a great interest +in the embroidery of the bed and table linen and the really artistic +embroidery of their national costumes. Nothing of this is seen in +England. Table linen is bought _ready hemmed_ at the shop. Dainty +tea-cloths and serviettes are purchased ready embroidered (by machine) +and trimmed with machine-made lace. Even _lingerie_ of all classes is +machine-made and bought by the dozen, instead of being made by the +daughters of the house. + +The only hope of a revival lies in the various Art schools in the +country where designing for fine embroidery and lace is encouraged. +Unfortunately, however, equal facilities are offered for designing of +machine-made imitations. The Royal School of Needlework, not being a +Government institution, offers no encouragement to outsiders. It is in +the hands of a number of ladies, who manage it as they will; and +although very fine work is accomplished, they trust too much to modern +designers and artists who work out their own pet theories and hobbies. +If only they would put aside all theories and new ideas, and _go back_ +to the best periods of English art both for their designs and execution, +even yet, with the intelligent use of the glorious examples in the +adjoining Museum, much might be done to revivify this expiring art. + +FINIS + + + + +INDEX + + + + +INDEX + + +OLD LACE. (_For Needlework see page 384_) + + +A + +Adelaide, Queen, 116 + +Age of lace, 108, 191 + +Alencon lace, 29, 78, 183, 191 + +Argentan lace, 29, 78, 191 + +Argentella lace, 29, 81, 192 + +Anne, Queen, 157 + +Applique, 175 + +Aylesbury, 158 + + +B + +Baby lace, 157 + +Barri, Madame du, 90 + +Beading, 41 + +Beads on bobbins, 161 + +Bed furnishing, 73 + +Bedfordshire lace, 37, 157 + +Belgian lace, 37 + +Black lace, 94 + +Blonde lace, 94 + +Bone lace, 41 + +Bobbins, 41, 158 + +Bolckow, Mrs., 54 + +Brides, 38, 127 + +Brussels lace, 37, 81, 104, 108, 123, 195 + +Brussels applique, 123 + +Brussels Vrai Reseau, 111 + +Buckinghamshire lace, 30, 35, 157, 158, 161 + +Burano, 54, 81 + +Buttonhole stitch, 195 + + +C + +Caen lace, 97 + +Carrick-ma-cross, 175 + +Catherine de Medici, 73 + +Chantilly lace, 37, 93 + +Charles I., 148 + +Charles II., 104, 148, 151 + +Charlotte, Queen, 161 + +Christie's sale-room, 115, 201 + +Colbert, 29, 73, 77, 102 + +Collar lace, 61 + +Collar, Medici, 53 + +Commonwealth, 148 + +Cordonnet, 41, 53, 77 + +Convents, 26 + +Coptic embroideries, 21 + +Couronnes, 41 + +Cravat, 151 + +Creevy Papers, 115 + +Cromwell, 151 + +Crotchet, 175 + +Cut worke, 73, 187 + +Cuthbert, St., 22 + + +D + +Danish lace, 134 + +Darned netting, 173 + +Debenham & Storr's sale-room, 54, 200 + +Dentele, 41 + +Devonshire lace, 30, 162 + +Dorsetshire lace, 161 + +Drawn work, 21 + +Duchesse lace, 127 + +Durham Cathedral, 22 + + +E + +Ecclesiastical lace, 62 + +Edgings, 31 + +Edward IV., 144 + +Egyptian netting, 22 + +Elizabeth, Queen of England, 54, 147 + +Embroidered net, 172 + +English laces, 157 + +Empress Eugenie, 97 + + +F + +Falling collar, 148 + +Fausse Valenciennes, 89 + +Fillings, 40, 173 + +"Figure" motifs, 107 + +Flanders lace, 29, 103 + +Flat point (point plat), 50 + +Flax thread, 61, 107 + +Florence, 53 + +Flemish point, 103 + +Fond, 42 + +Fontange, 151 + +Fowler, Mrs., of Honiton, 166 + +France, point de, 74 + +French Revolution, 78 + + +G + +Genoese lace, 29 + +George I., 115 + +George II., 115 + +George III., 115 + +George IV., 112 + +German laces, 134 + +Ghent laces, 124 + +Gingles, 161 + +Gold and silver laces, 134 + +Greek laces, 103, 183 + +Groppo, Punto a, 62 + +Gros, Point de Venise, 53 + +Grounds, 37 + +Guipure, 42, 61 + +Gold lace, 22 + + +H + +Hamilton lace, 171 + +"Hayward's," 114 + +Henry VII., 144 + +Henry VIII., 147 + +High Wycombe, 158 + +History of lace, 21 + +Honiton, 30, 35, 165 + +Honiton applique, 30 + +Huguenots, 30 + + +I + +Identification of lace, 183 + +Irish lace, 30, 172, 176, 192 + +Italian lace, 45 + + +J + +James I., 148 + +James II., 151 + +Jours, 41, 81 + + +K + +Kenmare, Lady, 75 + +King of Rome, 112 + + +L + +"Lacis," 29, 73 + +Lappets, 112 + +Lawn, 93 + +Lewis Hill, Mrs., 201 + +Lille, 35, 91 + +Limerick, 124, 172 + +L'Onray, 76 + +Louis XIV., 29, 46, 73, 74 + +Louis XV., 78 + +Lyme Regis, 162 + + +M + +Machine-made ground, 172 + +Macrame, 37, 64 + +Malines, 127 + +Maltese, 137 + +Mantillas, 97 + +Marie Antoinette, 78, 123, 129 + +Massey-Mainwaring, Mrs., 200 + +Marie de Medici, 53 + +Marie Stuart, 171 + +Mary, Queen, 147 + +Mary II., 151, 152 + +Mechlin, 37, 127 + +Medici collar, 53 + +Mezzo Punto, 62 + +Milanese lace, 29, 62 + +Mixed lace, 37, 62, 124 + +Modern point lace, 124 + +Montespan, Madame de, 74 + + +N + +Napoleon I., 78, 112 + +National Library, S.K.M., 50 + +Needlepoint lace, 49, 73, 108 + +Network, ancient, 3 + +Newport Pagnell, 158 + +Normandy lace, 97 + +Norway, 134 + +Northamptonshire lace, 157 + +Nuns, 26 + + +O + +Oeil de perdrix, 83, 192 + +Origin of lace, 21 + + +P + +Palliser, Mrs. Bury, 9 + +Parchment, 25 + +Parasole, 50 + +Pearls, 97 + +Peter the Great, 134 + +Picots, 42 + +Pillow lace, 29, 37 + +Point lace, 25, 37 + +Point a reseau, 53 + +Point d'Aiguille (Brussels), 108 + +Point d'Alencon, 76 + +Point d'Angleterre, 102, 107, 192 + +Point applique, 123 + +Point de France, 46, 76, 188 + +Point de Gaze, 108, 124 + +Point de Venise, 49 + +Point de Venise Gros, 50, 53, 54 + +Point de Neige, 49, 50 + +Point plat, 50 + +Punto in aria, 25, 143 + +Punto a groppo, 37, 62 + +Punto tagliato a foliami, 53 + + +Q + +Quillings, 128 + +Quentin Matys, 103 + +Queen Anne, 157 + +Queen Mary II., 117, 127, 151 + +Queen Charlotte, 117, 128 + +Queen of Laces, 128 + +Queen Victoria, 116, 162 + + +R + +Raised stars, 49 + +Rose point, 49, 50 + +Renaissance, 53, 107, 188 + +Reseau, 36, 39 + +Reticella, 26, 50, 73, 103, 143, 188 + +Revolution, French, 78 + +Rococo, 78 + +Royal trousseaux, 81 + +Ruffles, 90 + +Russian lace, 134 + + +S + +St. Cuthbert, 22 + +Sale prices, 199 + +Samplers, 25, 187 + +Saxony lace, 134 + +Scotch lace, 171 + +Silk lace, 94 + +Smocks, 25 + +Spanish point, 133 + +Steinkirk, 151 + +Sumptuary law, 112 + +South Kensington Museum, 187 + + +T + +Tambour lace, 172 + +Tape lace, 62 + +Tatting, 175 + +Thread, 61 + +Toile, 108 + +Trolly lace, 165 + + +V + +Valenciennes lace, 37, 89 + +Vandyke, 61, 148 + +Venice, 183 + +Vicellio, 50 + +Venetian lace, 50 + +Victoria, Queen, 162, 165 + +Vinciolo, 29, 50 + +Vraie Valenciennes, 89, 90 + + +W + +Westminster effigies, 147, 151, 152 + +William and Mary, 148, 151 + +"Wynyards," 115 + +William III., 115 + +Wiltshire lace, 115 + +Willis's Rooms, 201 + + +Y + +Youghal laces, 176 + + +NEEDLEWORK + + +A + +Athelstan, 213 + +Alb, 238 + +Aldhelm, Bishop of Sherborne, 213 + +Aelfled, Queen of Edward the Elder, 213 + +Angelica Kauffmann, 339 + +Art, the pioneer, 209 + +Ascagni cope, 223 + +Ascoli cope, 233 + + +B + +Bags, Stuart, 261 + +Bayeux tapestry, 214 + +Beads, Venetian, 274 + +Berlin wool pictures, 350 + +Bishop Fridhestan, 213 + +Black work, 284 + +Bologna cope, 223 + +Book-covers, 279 + +Bridgettine nuns, 227 + + +C + +Catworth cushions, 233 + +Catherine of Aragon, 248, 251, 284 + +Caskets, 269 + +Chain stitch, 227 + +Charles I., 265, 273 + +Charles II., 265, 273 + +Chasubles, 241 + +Christie's sale-rooms, 257, 265, 270, 367 + +City palls, 237 + +Church vestments, 238 + +Coventry, 228 + +Copes, 241 + +Crewel work, 329 + + +D + +Daroca cope at Madrid, 223 + +Dr. Rock, 227 + + +E + +Earl of Shrewsbury, 228 + +Editha, Queen of Edward the Confessor, 213 + +Egyptian embroidery, 210 + +Emma, Queen of Ethelred the Unready, 213 + +Elizabeth's wardrobe, 249 + +Elizabeth's Book at British Museum, 283 + +Elizabeth's Book at the Bodleian Library, 283 + +Elizabeth Hinde's Sampler, 309 + +Elizabeth Mackett's Sampler, 311 + + +F + +Field of the Cloth of Gold, 249 + + +G + +Georgian costumes, 363 + +Georgian pictures, 335 + +Gimps, 249 + +Gloves, 262, 265 + +Greek garments, 359 + + +H + +Hampton Court, 250, 322 + +Hair and silk pictures, 343 + +Henrietta Maria, Queen, 265 + +Henry VIII., 247 + +Hoechon collection, 220 + + +I + +Isleworth, 227 + +Italian raised work, 295 + + +J + +James I., 257 + +Jacobean hangings, 321 + +"Jesse" Cope, 223 + +John Taylor's Needlework Rhyme, 258 + + +L + +Lady Jane Grey, 247 + +"Laid," or couch work, 227 + +Linwood, Miss, 350 + + +M + +Maniple, 241 + +Mary Queen of Scots, 250 + +Mary II. embroidery, 325 + +Minerva, 358 + +Mirror frames, 273 + + +N + +Needlework pictures, 291, 335, 349 + +Neolithic remains, 210 + +"Nevil" altar-frontal, 234 + + +O + +Opus Anglicum, or Anglicanum, 219, 223 + + +P + +"Painted face" picture, 335, 343 + +Petit point, 257, 325 + +Phoenicians, 359 + +Phrygian embroidery, 358 + +Pierpont Morgan, 233 + +Pocket books, 281 + +Pope Innocent III., 223 + + +Q + +Quilting, 287 + + +R + +Reformation, 246 + +Roman Invasion, 210 + +Royal School of Needlework, 353 + +Rock's "Church of Our Fathers," 220 + + +S + +Samplers, 307 + +St. Augustine, 210 + +St. Benedict, 220 + +St. Cuthbert, 213 + +St. Dunstan, 213 + +Steeple Aston altar-frontal, 234 + +Stoles, 238 + +Stump work, 295 + +Stump work symbols, 302 + +"Syon" cope, 223 + +Subjects of needle pictures, 295 + + +T + +Tambour stitch, 227 + +Tudor embroideries, 247 + +Trays, 270 + + +W + +Wonderful needlewoman, A, 351 + +Wolsey, Cardinal, 249, 250 + +Wolseley's, Lady, collection, 265, 273, 368 + +Worcester fragments, 219 + + +_Printed in Great Britain by_ +UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON + + + + + * * * * * + + + + +Transcriber's Note: + +Obvious punctuation errors have been corrected. + +Inconsistent hyphenation in the original has been preserved, e.g. +cutwork, cut-work; hand-made, handmade; lace-workers, laceworkers; +may-flower, mayflower; needle-craft, needlecraft; needle-point, +needlepoint; salerooms, sale-rooms; semi-circular, semicircular. + +Inconsistent use of accents has been preserved, e.g. applique, applique; +reseau, reseau; toile, toile. + +In the Index, Pierpoint was corrected to Pierpont to match the body of +the text. + +The main body of the text refers to the "Hockon collection", which is +referred to in the index as the "Hoechon collection". It is unclear which +of these is correct so they have been preserved as they appear in the +original. + +Page 25: 'survival of the fitting' changed to 'survival of the fittest'. + +Page 38: 'accompanying diagrams' changed to 'accompanying diagram'. + +Page 42: 'little loop' changed to 'little loops'. + +Page 127: '"Duchesse point" of "Bruges,"' changed to '"Duchesse point" +or "Bruges,"'. + +Page 192: 'of same period' changed to 'of the same period'. + +Page 196: 'other two' changed to 'two other'. + +Page 300: 'and rose of England' changed to 'and the rose of England'. + +Page 303: 'and butterfly was' changed to 'and butterfly were'. + +Page 315: 'a long narrow Samplers' changed to 'a long narrow Sampler'. + +Page 383: 'Punto a groppo' changed to 'Punto a groppo'. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHATS ON OLD LACE AND NEEDLEWORK*** + + +******* This file should be named 26120.txt or 26120.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/6/1/2/26120 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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