Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Feb 17, 2018 · But what did all that lace mean? Scholar Elaine Freedgood tells the story of how, in the face of encroaching industrialism, handmade lace enjoyed a frilly revival—and masked fears about the commodification of female labor.

    • Victorians

      Narrowly escaping slavery herself, Baker risked her life to...

  2. Oct 10, 2016 · The sudden ubiquity of lace meant two things: Hell to the yes, more women could now stock up on Queen Alexandra of Denmark knockoff gowns, and designers now had carte blanche to go crazy...

    • Lisa Fogarty
  3. Feb 18, 2021 · For decades, the corset was a reigning symbol of patriarchal oppressionthought to be a ghastly and restrictive device that rendered women immobile, passive, and prone to fainting spells, with a factor of their social worth dependent on the circumference of their waists.

  4. Mar 6, 2023 · Women were kept busy creating goods to exchange in local markets — working with their children spinning cloth or weaving hats, making quilts, needlework, and lace.

  5. This essay will analyse these matrilineal fictions in terms of their influences on the novel's protagonists Sue and Maud, as well as considering the novel's matrilinealism first as a feminist ...

  6. www.jstor.org › stable › 10A History of Lace

    Lace is the creation of a series of holes to form a design. Categorized as looping, interlacing, circular in definition and sometimes in the making. In Europe, in the late Middle Ages, women began filling in cutwork or drawn threads with nets of stars and flowers in colored silks and silver-gilt. Needle lace is like embroidery in the air. *

  7. People also ask

  8. Nov 23, 2022 · Flouncy, transparent, stiff, protective: lace is charged with a myriad of emotions, experiences, meanings, and memories. It’s the fabric of grandmothers, but also a textile of childhood. It’s...

  1. People also search for