Pair of Gloves thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Pair of Gloves

1615-1625 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Gloves could serve several purposes in early 17th century Britain, apart from the obvious ones of protection and warmth. Many were solely decorative, to display the wealth and status of their owner. They were worn in the hat or belt, as well as carried in the hand. Gloves were popular as gifts and were exchanged as a gesture of engagement or wedding present. In combat, a glove was thrown down as a gage, or challenge.

Decorative gloves were popular with England’s working class. In 1618 Horatio Busini, chaplain to the Venetian ambassador to England, wrote disapprovingly in a report on English customs: “all wear very costly gloves. This fashion of gloves is so universal that even the porters wear them very ostentatiously.”

The decoration of this pair is characteristic of the period 1615 to 1625 with couched embroidery in a stylised pattern and fringe of metal thread.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Glove
  • Glove
Materials and techniques
Kidskin, silk, silver, gold; hand-sewn, hand embroidered
Brief description
Pair of man's or woman's gloves of embroidered kidskin, 1615-25, English; silver-gilt and silk thread, silver gilt fringe
Physical description
Pair of man's or woman's gloves of kidskin, with cuffs lined with carnation silk sarsenet. Each glove is couched with silver and silver-gilt filé, purl and spangles, and silver filé wrapped around blue silk floss and pink silk floss in a design of roses. The cuff is trimmed with silver-gilt looped fringe.
Dimensions
  • Length: 30.0cm (approx)
  • 202 a 1900 length: 30.0cm (approx)
Summary
Gloves could serve several purposes in early 17th century Britain, apart from the obvious ones of protection and warmth. Many were solely decorative, to display the wealth and status of their owner. They were worn in the hat or belt, as well as carried in the hand. Gloves were popular as gifts and were exchanged as a gesture of engagement or wedding present. In combat, a glove was thrown down as a gage, or challenge.

Decorative gloves were popular with England’s working class. In 1618 Horatio Busini, chaplain to the Venetian ambassador to England, wrote disapprovingly in a report on English customs: “all wear very costly gloves. This fashion of gloves is so universal that even the porters wear them very ostentatiously.”

The decoration of this pair is characteristic of the period 1615 to 1625 with couched embroidery in a stylised pattern and fringe of metal thread.
Bibliographic reference
John Lea Nevinson, Catalogue of English Domestic Embroidery of the Sixteenth & Seventeenth Centuries, Victoria and Albert Museum, Department of Textiles, London: HMSO, 1938, p.95
Collection
Accession number
202&A-1900

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Record createdJuly 14, 2008
Record URL
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