I thought some lace depicting cupids would be appropriate for this time of year with St Valentine’s day falling on 14 February. This piece of lace is one of a pair of narrow curtains made in filet lace. It is not antique, but is handmade and was probably produced in the Far East some time in the last 50 years.
It includes flowers
as well as six cupids, some lying down and others playing musical instruments or
catching butterflies. The design is quite simple and open, which works well for
curtains that are designed to let in the light but screen the interior of the
house from the gaze of passers by.
The lace is
made in several stages and is more complicated than it appears. This close-up image
shows the knots of the netting and the thread patterns of the linen stitch. The
first stage is to make the background net, which is done with a knotting
technique, in a process similar to that for making fishermen’s nets. The open
squares of the net have to be the same size to produce neat designs and this is
ensured by using a guide bar over which the loops of the net are formed.
Once the net
is made, it is held taut in a frame, and the toile or linen stitches that form
the pattern are worked into it. Each patterned square of net includes two
vertical and two horizontal threads woven over each other and the outer threads
of the square mesh.
However, rows
and blocks of stitches are worked together with a continuous thread so the thread
paths have to be determined before the work starts and can be quite complicated
as you can see from this simple circular shape. The linen stitch diagram and
this photograph of work in progress both come from Pauline Knight’s book The
technique of filet lace, first published in 1980, which gives instructions
for netting and stitching and includes much historical information from Pauline’s
extensive research. If you are interested in finding out more about filet lace this book is an excellent
place to start. Happy Valentines day!


















