Bucks point lace made from this draught won a gold medal at the Great Exhibition in 1851. According to Thomas Wright, Miss Elizabeth Clayson from Olney demonstrated lacemaking at the exhibition and was working on this pattern when Queen Victoria visited the show. The Queen asked the usual question ‘Are the different coloured bobbins a guide to which thread you turn over?’ and was told this was not the case. Whether she highlighted its similarity to tatting is not recorded! (These are the two observations everyone makes at lace demonstrations!)
The pattern
was designed by John Millward from Olney, a well-known Buckinghamshire
lace-making town, for the lace manufacturers Messrs. Copestake and Co. The Jury
report of the exhibition suggests that the medal was awarded to the company,
not the designer or lacemaker, and was for their complete range including Bucks
point, Honiton and tambour lace as well as embroidered muslin. Particular
mention is made of ‘very wide Buckinghamshire lace of fine quality’ which
presumably refers to this pattern. The lace was made in three widths and we are
not told which one Miss Clayson was working on when she met the Queen, I do
hope it was a smaller, more manageable, version and not the very wide one.
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