In my blog of 19 June I looked at Honiton lace bobbins and explained why they are finer than East Midlands bobbins and don’t require spangles to weight them. Most Honiton bobbins are plain, but some are inscribed and decorated by incising their surface, in a similar way to scrimshaw, and then filing the incisions with coloured sealing wax. The bobbin on the right, in the image above, shows the typical triangular shaped incisions filled with red wax. The central area depicts a sailing ship with sails and rigging and a circle with simple markings possibly to represent the sun or a face. Round the top of the bobbin, three letters are inscribed, separated by triangles; these are presumably the initials of the owner or the giver. The inscription on the second bobbin is much more complex and more finely worked. It includes the initials SM at the top and the date 1817, but the name Elizabeth Matthews is inscribed in a spiral down the shank of the bobbin, which suggests that SM gave this bobbin to Elizabeth as a gift. Between the lines of the spiral are a ship, an anchor, a bird and a diamond shape, all linked with small patterns made up of tiny triangular shapes. This bobbin has also been coloured with both red and dark blue or black sealing wax. These bobbins are typical of inscribed Honiton bobbins in that they both include initials and ships, which were often so realistically drawn that the type of vessel can be identified. Other motifs used were animals, such as fish or birds, human figures and mermaids, stylised flowers, hearts and patterns of lines, bricks or triangles. If you are interested in finding out more, a good source of images is H J Yallop’s book The history of the Honiton lace industry, in which he includes several pages of these symbols.
Thursday, 28 November 2024
Thursday, 21 November 2024
Mary Bailey lace runner and poet
Mary Bailey was a lace runner in Nottingham in the early part of the nineteenth century, which meant she embroidered lace designs onto machine-made net. It was a skilled job requiring artistic talent, good eyesight and neat, accurate work and was essential to the Nottingham lace trade because, at that time, lace machines could not produce patterned lace, only net ground. Mary was one of many poorly paid lace workers whose lives generally went unremarked. But Mary was different, because in 1826 she published a pamphlet of 13 poems to raise money to help her to support her young children and sickly husband. These poems are not the anodyne verses expected from a working-class woman who knows her place. Instead they reflect her life and work, her hopes and fears and the struggle to give her family a decent life. One reflects on the hard work required to make lace and why it should be fairly remunerated. Here are the first two verses:
You ladies of
Britain, we most humbly address/And hope you will take it in hand/And at once
condescend on poor runners to think/When dress’d at your glasses you stand
How little
you think of that lily-white veil/That shields you from gazers and sun/ How
hard have we work’d, and our eyes how we’ve strain’d/When those beautiful
flowers we run.
Another poem thanks
the lady who came to her house with bread one evening when she had nothing to
feed her children. One poem shames another lady who ‘desired me to pray for the
death of my youngest child’ because she considered Mary had too many children. Another
reports how Mary challenged two middle-class girls she saw tormenting a locust
and highlights the morality of the story. Other poems record events in her life
and people she knew. Mary died in 1828, two years after the poems were
published, leaving her husband and nine children below the age of thirteen. I
do hope they survived and prospered after all her efforts to look after them.
What an amazing woman.
My
information about Mary Bailey came from a booklet published by Five Leaves Bookshop in Nottingham in which her poems are
reprinted and introduced by John Goodridge.
Thursday, 14 November 2024
So called ‘Bohemian’ lace from 1911
While researching early twentieth century lace recently I came across a series of advertisements for ‘Bohemian’ lace in the American publication Lace and Embroidery Review. This magazine was aimed at the trade buyer and informs them that a new lace line for Spring will be ‘Bohemian’ lace, which it claims is already very popular in Paris, particularly in champagne and ecru colours. Now, I appreciate that Bohemia is a well-known lace producing area, famous for both its traditional and contemporary lace, but the ‘Bohemian’ lace depicted in the magazine article is described as a tape lace made up of ‘two and sometimes three widths of linen tape twisted in arabesque form and very lightly bound together by brides’. It continues by suggesting that the designs resemble Moorish architecture and are also reminiscent of vermicelli patterns made from soutache braids. The dictionary tells me that soutache is a narrow, flat, ornamental braid used to trim garments and therefore is indeed very similar to the tapes used in tape lace.
The
advertorial tells us that these ‘Bohemian’ laces come in both handmade and
machine made varieties. Tape lace was popular at this time and many women’s
magazines included patterns to be made up at home. It was also easy to buy a
variety of different braids and threads from haberdashery shops. However the
laces in the images are all machine made varieties sold by the dealers Case and
Co. I don’t think it is surprising that the manufacturers have repurposed the
name Bohemian for their lace. Machine laces were often given the names of
handmade varieties of lace, for example, Valenciennes and Chantilly, to
describe the style of the lace. I think the price would have soon made it clear
whether the lace in question was hand or machine made.
Thursday, 7 November 2024
Using filet lace insertions in the home
This filet lace insertion is Italian and was worked in the seventeenth century. It appears on the cover of an early twentieth century edition of Needlecraft magazine (annoyingly none of these magazines are dated). The magazine includes several filet lace patterns and includes suggestions for using them to decorate clothing and household linen. It notes that this design ‘would make a fine flounce for a duchesse table cloth or for the edge of a towel’. It also recommends that this type of border should be combined with fine drawn-thread work.
These filet
squares have been inserted in linen and although the piece does not include any
drawn-thread work, four different cut-work designs have been used to break up
the solid, woven areas. Strangely, the magazine says that if an insertion like
this is added to plain linen it looks over-elaborate, but if it is combined
with satin-stitch embroidery, broderie anglais or Hedebo work the ‘fineness of
the border is justified and its beauty enhanced’. It seems odd to specify these
three types of embroidery – what about cut-work, for example, does that enhance
the beauty or not? Also you would think that adding all these different types
of needlework would result in over-elaboration rather than the reverse!
However, I do think the addition of cut-work in the image above enhances the
piece, so perhaps the author is right after all.