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  1. The Lace Industry. Lace was probably made in the Eastern Counties (Buckinghamshire, Bedfordshire, Northamptonshire) prior to 1563. This was, and still is, a flax growing area. The first wave of lacemakers from the continent came in 1563 to 1568.

  2. We want to hear from scholars, lacemakers and the general public about their interactions with lace, their own experiences of the craft and their insights into its history. Lace as a high fashion item is well represented in public galleries, but historically lacemakers themselves have been relatively invisible: we want to correct that through our active blog.

  3. Dec 16, 2018 · On 16th January 2021. In Belgian lace, Guest Contribution, Lace patrons, Lacemakers in the Low Countries, Lacemakers in the Past, Lacemakers' tools. For several centuries the Flemish lace industry was a cottage industry. Different generations worked together in their home. In this way, girls got an early grasp of the craft.

    • Where did a lacemaker's 'tell' come from?1
    • Where did a lacemaker's 'tell' come from?2
    • Where did a lacemaker's 'tell' come from?3
    • Where did a lacemaker's 'tell' come from?4
    • Where did a lacemaker's 'tell' come from?5
  4. The bobbin-net machine, invented in 1808 by John Heathcote, saw machinery used in lace-making for the first time. But its impact was dwarfed by the dawn of steam-powered machinery. Suddenly, huge machines could create lace at scale. And so, Nottingham became known for producing not only lace, but the heavy machinery required to create it.

  5. Jun 29, 2020 · Historians agree that lacemaking first originated in Venice and Flanders. Venice became well-known for its needle lace, which uses a single needle and thread, while Flanders developed bobbin lace, which plaits many threads together and is generally faster. Machine-made bobbin lace, cropped. From the Auckland War Memorial Museum.

    • Kathleen Cubley
  6. Feb 19, 2017 · John Edward Linnell (1842-1919) grew up in Silverstone, or ‘Silson’ in the local parlance. Years later, when serving as vicar of Pavenham near Bedford (another lace village), he wrote an account of his childhood. Linnell came to holy orders by a round-about route and his memoirs are more robust than one might expect from a Victorian clergyman.

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  8. Jun 16, 2017 · A Lacemaker Nicolaes Maes (1634–1693) - Red chalk, framing lines in pencil 14.1 x 11.8 cm. Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam Bobbin Lace Imitates Needle Lace! Bobbin lace became more complicated in design at the beginning of the 17th century and started to imitate the refinement of needle lace.

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