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A history of lace
- Titel
- A history of lace
- Autor
- Palliser, Fanny
- Verleger
- Marston
- Searle
- Low
- Erscheinungsort
- London
- Erscheinungsdatum
- 1875
- Umfang
- X, 454 S.
- Sprache
- English
- Signatur
- 75/4694
- Vorlage
- Westsächsische Hochschule Zwickau
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Lizenz-/Rechtehinweis
- CC BY-SA 4.0
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-db-id4470176161
- PURL
- http://digital.slub-dresden.de/id447017616
- OAI-Identifier
- oai:de:slub-dresden:db:id-447017616
- SLUB-Katalog (PPN)
- 447017616
- Sammlungen
- Bestände der Westsächsischen Hochschule Zwickau
- Design
- Historische textiltechnische Fachliteratur
- Ausgabe
- 3. ed.
- Strukturtyp
- Monographie
- Parlamentsperiode
- -
- Wahlperiode
- -
- Titel
- Chapter XXIX. The Lack Manufactures Of England
- Digitalisat
- SLUB Dresden
- Strukturtyp
- Kapitel
- Parlamentsperiode
- -
- Wahlperiode
- -
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- MonographieA history of lace -
- EinbandEinband -
- AbbildungBarbara Uttmann, who introduced the lace manufacture into the ... -
- TitelblattTitelblatt III
- KapitelPreface V
- KapitelChapter I. Needlework 1
- KapitelChapter II. Cutwork 10
- KapitelChapter III. Lace 21
- KapitelChapter IV. Italy 34
- KapitelChapter V. Greece 65
- KapitelChapter VI. Spain 71
- KapitelChapter VII. Flanders 86
- KapitelChapter VIII. France To Louis XIV. 114
- KapitelChapter IX. Louis XIV. 124
- KapitelChapter X. Louis XIV. (continued) 131
- KapitelChapter XI. Louis XV. 142
- KapitelChapter XII. Louis XVI. To the Empire 150
- KapitelChapter XIII. The Lace Manufactures Of France 158
- KapitelChapter XIV. Argentan 173
- KapitelChapter XV. Isle De France. - Paris 180
- KapitelChapter XVI. Normandy 186
- KapitelChapter XVII. Valenciennes 197
- KapitelChapter XVIII. Auvergne And Vélay 211
- KapitelChapter XIX. Limousin 218
- KapitelChapter XX. Holland, Germany, And Switzerland 225
- KapitelChapter XXI. Denmark, Sweden, And Russia 238
- KapitelChapter XXII. England To Queen Elizabeth 251
- KapitelChapter XXIII. Queen Elizabeth 264
- KapitelChapter XXIV. James I. To The Restoration 280
- KapitelChapter XXV. Charles II. To The House Of Hanover 299
- KapitelChapter XXVI. George I. And II. 314
- KapitelChapter XXVII. Smuggling 320
- KapitelChapter XXVIII. George III. 325
- KapitelChapter XXIX. The Lack Manufactures Of England 332
- KapitelChapter XXX. Bedfordshire, Bucklinghamshire, And Northamptonshire 336
- KapitelChapter XXXI. Wiltshire And Dorsetshire 351
- KapitelChapter XXXII. Devonshire 355
- KapitelChapter XXXIII. Scotland 370
- KapitelChapter XXXIV. Lace Manufactures Of Scotland 381
- KapitelChapter XXXV. Ireland 388
- KapitelChapter XXXVI. Bobbin-Net And Machine-Made Lace 395
- KapitelAppendix 405
- RegisterIndex 445
- EinbandEinband -
- Titel
- A history of lace
- Autor
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332 HISTORY OF LACE. CIIAPTEE XXIX. THE LACE MANUFACTURES OF ENGLAND. “ Yon cottager, who weaves at her own door, Pillow and bobbins all her little store; Content though mean, and cheerful if not gay, Shuffling her threads about the livelong day : Just earns a scanty pittance, and at night Lies down secure, her heart and pocket light.” Cowper. The bone lace manufactures of England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries appear to have extended over a much wider area than they occupy in the present day. From Cambridge to the adjacent counties of Northampton and Hertfordshire, by Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, and Oxfordshire, the trade spread over the southern counties of Wiltshire, Somersetshire, 1 Hamp shire, and Dorset, to the more secluded valleys of Devon—the county which still sustains the ancient reputation of “ English point ”—terminating at Launceston, on the Cornish coast. Various offsets from these fabrics were established in Wales. 2 llipon, 3 an isolated manufactory, represented the lace industry of 1 “ Wells, bone lace and knitting stock ings.”—Anderson. 2 “ Launceston, where are two schools for forty-eight children of both sexes. The gills are taught to read, sew, and make bone lace, and they are to have their earnings for encouragement.”— Magna Britannia, 1720. Welsh lace was made at Swansea, Pont- Ardawe, Llanwrtyd, Dufynock, and Brecon, but never of any beauty, some not unlike a coarse Valenciennes. “ It was much made and worn,” said an aged Wesleyan lady, “ by our 1 connexion,’ and as a child I had all my frocks and pina fores trimmed with it. It was made in the cottages; each lace-maker had her own pattern, and carried it out for sale in the country.” 3 At what period, and by whom, the lace manufactory of Ripon was founded, we have been unable to ascertain. It was probably a relic of conventual days, which, after having followed the fashion of each time, has now gradually died out. Twenty years since, broad trolly laces of French design and fair workmanship were fabricated in the old cathedral city; where, in the poorer localities near the Bond and Blossomgate, young women might be seen working their intricate patterns, with pillows, bobbins, and pins. Now, one old woman alone, says our informant, sustains the memory of the
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