Bobbin lace
Bobbin lace is a lace textile made by braiding and twisting lengths of thread, which are wound on bobbins to manage them. As the work progresses, the weaving is held in place with pins set in a lace pillow, the placement of the pins usually determined by a pattern or pricking pinned on the pillow.
Bobbin lace is also known as pillow lace, because it was worked on a pillow, and bone lace, because early bobbins were made of bone<ref>Oxford English Dictionary definition of "bone lace"</ref> or ivory.
Bobbin lace is one of the two major categories of handmade laces, the other being needle lace, derived from earlier cutwork and reticella.<ref name="Levey">Template:Cite book</ref>
OriginEdit
A will of 1493 by the Milanese Sforza family mentions lace created with twelve bobbins.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> There are two books that represent the early known pattern descriptions for bobbin lace, Le Pompe<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> from Venice and Nüw Modelbuch<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> from Zürich. Other popular lace pattern books were produced by Isabella Parasole, which included patterns for reticella, needle lace and bobbin lace designs. Other pattern books of this period include Cesare Vecellio<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and Bartolomeo Danieli.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Bobbin lace evolved from passementerie or braid-making in 16th-century Italy.<ref name="Levey" /> Genoa was famous for its braids, hence it is not surprising to find bobbin lace developed in the city. It traveled along with the Spanish troops through Europe.<ref name=reigate>Template:Cite book</ref> Coarse passements of gold and silver-wrapped threads or colored silks gradually became finer, and later bleached linen yarn was used to make both braids and edgings.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
The making of bobbin lace was easier to learn than the elaborate cutwork of the 16th century, and the tools and materials for making linen bobbin lace were inexpensive. There was a ready market for bobbin lace of all qualities, and women throughout Europe soon took up the craft which earned a better income than spinning, sewing, weaving or other home-based textile arts. Bobbin lace-making was established in charity schools, almshouses, and convents.<ref name="Levey" />
In the 17th century, the textile centers of Flanders and Normandy eclipsed Italy as the premiere sources for fine bobbin lace, but until the Industrial Revolution and the coming of mechanization hand-lacemaking continued to be practiced throughout Europe, suffering only in those periods of simplicity when lace itself fell out of fashion.<ref name="Levey" />
Some skilled lace makers work to re-create older lace patterns based on the period portraiture and extant lace samples.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> On paintings that have sufficient detail, entire pieces can be reconstructed by lacemakers who understand the early structural techniques and details.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
MaterialsEdit
Bobbin lace may be made with coarse or fine threads. Traditionally it was made with linen, silk, wool, or, later, cotton threads, or with precious metals. Bess of Hardwick bought red silk, gold, and silver thread for making "bone lace" in 1549, the earliest English reference to this kind of work.<ref>Santina M. Levey, 'References to Dress in the Earliest Account Book of Bess of Hardwick', Costume, 34:1 (2000), 21.</ref> Today bobbin lace is made with a variety of natural and synthetic fibers and with wire and other filaments.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Even bobbin lace made from human hair, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, was once popular as a personal memento.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
StructureEdit
Elements of bobbin lace may include toile or toilé (clothwork), réseau (the net-like ground of continuous lace), fillings of part laces, tapes, gimp, picots, tallies, ribs and rolls. Not all styles of bobbin lace include all these elements.
- Sampler of Honiton fillings.jpg
The close up of the back shows the fillings are sewn onto the ribs and tied off
- Russian filling.jpg
A single plait can choose a clever path to construct a filling with sewings but without tying off
- Bobbin lace gimp.jpg
mesh (or ground) with a solitary gimp
- Picots.png
Picots. Top: double threaded, bottom single threaded.
- Honiton sample of raised work.jpg
Raised work, a rib on top of the left section, a roll on top of the right section
- Tallies.jpg
Rectangular tallies
- Mundillo de Moca.jpg
Another common shape of tallies arranged as flower petals
- Neuchatel lace.jpg
Mesh ground motif; toilé with a gimp, corner of half stitch, petals of cloth stitch
- Rosaline Perlée.jpg
part lace motifs, before being assembled
- Part lace motif.jpg
completed part lace
- Bobbin lace tape.jpg
A Tape (or braid) with footside on the left and a headside on the right
- Bobbin lace headside and footside.png
top headside bottom footside
- Manchet van gemengde kant in polychrome zijde, BK-BR-J-304-A-1.jpg
Polychrome lace by Michelangelo Jesurum combines styles and colored threads for effect.
- A lace guide for makers and collectors; with a bibliography and five-language nomenclature, profusely illus. with halftone plates and key designs (1920) (14779463312).jpg
A lace guide for makers and collectors; Gertrude Whiting's sampler (1920)
Traditional typesEdit
Many styles of lace were made in the heyday of lacemaking (approximately the 16th–18th centuries) before machine-made lace became available.
- Classification of traditional styles by technique
- Continuous bobbin lace also known as: straight lace or fil continu.
- Mesh grounded lace has motifs connected with ground
- Template:Tree list/final branch too many types to repeat here
- Template:Tree list/final branch Guipure lace has motifs connected with plaits<ref name=earnshawID>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
- Bedfordshire lace (Beds) – this has flowing lines and picots (to foil the lace machines)
- Cluny lace – has radiating long, thin leaves, called wheatears
- Maltese lace – often has the 8 pointed Maltese cross as part of the pattern
- Yak lace – made of wool
- Cantu Lace—also called Venetian Pointe lace
- Template:Tree list/final branch Genoese lace – usually a geometric design
- Mesh grounded lace has motifs connected with ground
- Part lace
- Honiton lace – very fine English lace with many flowers
- Rosaline Perlée – a mixed lace, but mainly bobbin lace
- Bruges lace – assembled from leaves scrolls and open flowers
- Template:Tree list/final branch Brussels lace – Point d'Angleterre, Point plat appliqué, Point Duchesse
- Template:Tree list/final branch Bobbin tape lace sometimes categorized as part lace (not to be confused with tape lace which uses prefabricated tapes)
- Continuous bobbin lace also known as: straight lace or fil continu.
Contemporary lacesEdit
The advent of machine-made lace at first pushed lace-makers into more complicated designs beyond the capabilities of early machines, then simpler designs so they could compete on price, and finally pushed them out of business almost entirely.
The resurgence of lace-making is a recent phenomenon and is mostly done as a hobby. Lacemaking groups still meet in regions as varied as Devonshire, England and Orange County, California.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In the European towns where lace was once a major industry or popular artisanry, especially in Belgium, England, Spain (Camariñas and Almagro), Portugal (Azores, Caminha, Lagos, Nisa, Olhão, Peniche, Póvoa de Varzim, Sesimbra, Setúbal, Silves, Viana do Castelo, Vila do Conde and Viseu (Farminhão),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> being known as Renda de Bilros),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> France and Slovenia lacemakers still demonstrate the craft and sell their wares, though their customer base has shifted from the wealthy nobility to the curious tourist.
Still new types of lace are being developed such as the 3D Rosalibre<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and a colored version of Milanese lace by borrowing rolls from Duchesse lace to store various shades and colors.<ref name=woods>Template:Cite book</ref> Other artists are giving grounds a major role by distorting and varying stitches, pin distances and thread sizes or colours. The variations are explored by experimentation<ref name="kantbrief">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and mathematics and algorithms.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The lace maintaining its shape without stiffening is no longer a requirement.<ref name="kantbrief"/> Inspiring journals, guilds and foundations show that old techniques with a new twist can challenge young people to create works that can definitely classify as art.<ref name="kantbrief2">Template:Cite journal</ref>
A Dutch design graduate in 2006 discovered bobbin lace was a technique to make a fancy fence. The first fences became museum pieces. The fences are now produced in Bangalore by concrete rebar plaiters.<ref name="fence">Template:Cite journal</ref>
ToolsEdit
The major tools to make bobbin lace are a pillow, bobbins, pins and prickings. The part laces also require a crochet hook, very fine types of lace require very fine hooks. There are different types of pillows and bobbins linked to areas, eras and type of lace.
BobbinsEdit
Bobbins, which are traditionally made of wood or bone, are used to hold the thread. They come in different shapes, often associated with certain types of lace. The parts of a bobbin are the neck, which is where the thread is wound, a head, where thread is hitched to keep it from coming unwound, and the shank, which is used as a handle. Bobbins from England may also have a beaded spangle at the end of the shank, which makes the bobbin heavier and helps with tensioning the thread.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Bobbins are usually 3 1/2 - 4 inches long, though they may be shorter or longer.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Bobbins are wound and used in pairs. Bobbin collection is a common aspect of the hobby for many lace makers. Within the lace community, commemorative bobbins designating annual meetings, special anniversaries, or historic events are frequently offered which become collector's items.
There are many types of bobbins, including:
- Belgian bobbins: They have a single head and a bulbous rounding near the end of the shank that helps with tensioning threads.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref>
- Binche bobbins: The round bulb near the end of the shank is small, making these bobbins good for fine, straight laces.
- East Midlands bobbins: These double-headed bobbins are slender and spangled. They are also called Bucks or Midlands bobbins.<ref name=":0" />
- Honiton bobbins: Honiton bobbins are straight below the single head, and the end of the shank comes to a blunt point, which helps with sewing. They may be called a lace stick.<ref name=":0" />
- Square bobbins: Square bobbins have a shank with flattened sides, which makes it easier to keep them from rolling on the pillow.
- Portuguese bobbins: The bobbin is an elongated pear-shaped wooden artefact where the thread is wrapped.
- Bone bobbins are sometimes decorated with names, commemorative text, or other messages and patterns
- Dentelle-IMG 6795.jpg
Cat tails, whose points are convenient for sewing
- Knipletrad.jpg
Danish bobbins
- The bobbin of the British type.jpg
- Frohnauer Hammer (15) 2006-11-04.jpg
Hooded bobbins
- Dentelles Cogne2.JPG
Large bulbs to throw every now and then, Cogne
- L-Spitzen2.png
winding schemes with a single hitch
- French Lace Pillow with bobbin cartridges.jpg
French Lace Pillow with bobbin cartridges
- Bobbin MET DP7530.jpg
Bone Bobbin MET DP7530, inscribed with text
- Bobbins (AM 9180).jpg
Bobbins (AM 9180), with various engraved decorations
Types of pillowEdit
The pillows must be firm, or otherwise the pins will wobble. The pillows were traditionally stuffed with straw, but nowadays polystyrene (styrofoam) is generally used.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Pillows were historically characteristic of the different regions where lace was made, but contemporary lacemakers may have multiples styles of pillows to accomplish different lace styles and projects.
An early type of pillow can be seen in The Lace Maker by Caspar Netscher. The pillow has a wooden frame, and is slightly sloping. The lace-maker rests it on her lap. Another representation of the similar style of pillow is found in the painting The Lacemaker by Johannes Vermeer. The Lace-Maker portrait by Gabriël Metsu was memorialized in a postage stamp.
The bolster or cylindrical pillow was much cheaper to make as it is just a fabric bag stuffed with straw. It was used in Bedfordshire lace. It needs a stand as it does not have a flat bottom.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Usually the bolster had the pattern pinned round the cylinder, so by turning the pillow, the lace could be as long as was needed. However, Maltese lacemakers used the pillow the other way. They had a long thin pillow, which they rested against something. Then they worked the lace down the length of the pillow.<ref name=crafts>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
This problem (of the lace needing to be longer than the pillow) is solved in a different way by the roller pillow, which has a small roller, for working the lace, set into a larger area, where the bobbins are laid. This means that the pattern can be pinned round the roller, but the pillow has a flat bottom.
The cheapest modern pillow is domed and made of polystyrene (styrofoam). It is often called a cookie pillow, because of its shape. Another modern pillow is a block pillow, with a frame which holds covered polystyrene blocks. The blocks can be moved around as the lace progresses, to keep the lace being worked on at the centre of the pillow.
- Caspar Netscher 003.jpg
by Caspar Netscher an early pillow with a wooden frame
- DDR 1959 Michel 694 Metsu.JPG
DDR 1959 Michel 694 Gabriël Metsu
- Wybrand Hendriks (1744-1831) - The Lace Maker - FA000267 - Brighton Museum ^ Art Gallery.jpg
Wybrand Hendriks (1744-1831) - The Lace Maker - Brighton Museum Art Gallery
- Tropinin lacemaker.jpg
- 'Venetian Lacemakers' by Robert Frederick Blum, Cincinnati Art Museum.JPG
by Robert Frederick Blum bolster pillows
- Leon Augustin LHermitte (French, 1844-1925) «The old lacemaker».jpg
by Léon Augustin Lhermitte a pillow typical for Queyras
- Stamp of Brazil - 1976 - Colnect 152243 - Lacemaker.jpeg
Stamp of Brazil - 1976 - Lacemaker and bolster pillow
- KITLV - 10831 - Kurkdjian - Soerabaja - Women lace-makers from Palembang at the pasar malam in Surabaya - 1905-1906.tif
Woman lace-maker from Sumatra
- Moa Island (woman sitting on mat making lace) Frank Hurley (25269461121).jpg
Moa Island (woman sitting on mat making lace)
- Mundillo pillow.jpg
Mundillo bobbin lace roller pillow and bobbins with pricking, from Puerto Rico
- Dentelles cogne epoca.jpg
Cogne pillows and stands
- Snark Beaver.jpg
Victorian domed pillow in The Hunting of the Snark
- Datteln - KF2011 - Markfelder Straße 08 ies.jpg
Modern domed pillow or "cookie pillow"
- Malta, Lace making.jpg
Maltese bolster
- Zestaw do wyrobu koronki klockowej Słowacja.jpg
- Reproduction Ipswich lace pillow on display in the Smithsonian American History Museum.jpg
Ipswich bolster
- Roller pillow.jpg
Roller pillow
- Museu Etnològic del Castell de Guadalest, boixets.JPG
Roller pillow
- Block pillow.jpg
Block pillow
- Gens de l'alpe Musée dauphinois 2020 abc90.jpg
Type of lace loom in use in the Dauphinoise Alps
Lacemaking organizationsEdit
Lacemaking is considered a folk art with technique and materials varying widely across the globe. Most lacemakers belong to regional guilds within their country of origin. Guilds can be devoted to one kind of lace, often that which developed locally, or may include makers of all kinds. In the United States, most guilds are organized within chapters of the International Organization of Lace, which also includes Canadian lace guilds. Quarterly publications of "The Bulletin" journal provide articles about current projects and events, historical research, annual meeting details, patterns, and more. Internationally, the Organisation Internationale de la Dentelle au Fuseau et à l'Aiguille (OIDFA, International Bobbin and Needle Lace Organization) is the primary governing and networking body for lacemakers. OIDFA organizes annual global congresses, regional fairs, and local gatherings to promote the appreciation and knowledge of lacemaking.