Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 56, The Djanogly Gallery

Border

1620-1640 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Object Type
Lace-making developed in England during the 16th century in response to the growth in personal wealth and to changes in fashionable dress. Needle lace, still then seen as a branch of embroidery, was made in professional workshops in London. But through the teaching of embroidery as a domestic skill, with needle lace stitches in the repertoire, lace was also made at home, for the decoration of household linen and clothing.

Ownership & Use
Lace was worn by both men and women in the 17th century. It could be made to shape for particular items like collars, or worked in lengths, as this piece has been, to be adapted for different purposes. The showiest effects were achieved with lace worn at the throat, setting off the face, and at the wrist. A fashionable man might even have matching lace borders on the tops of his stockings, turning down over his boots.

Materials & Making
This example is made with a thick linen thread, giving solid areas decorated with tiny voided patterns. It was worked in simple buttonhole stitches over an outlining thread which would have followed a parchment pattern.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Needle lace
Brief description
Border of needle lace, England, 1620-1640.
Physical description
Border of needle lace.
Dimensions
  • Length: 162.5cm
  • Width: 8cm
Dimensions checked: Measured; 15/12/2000 by KB KB checked object dims, not display
Gallery label
British Galleries: Lace borders were used to trim collars, cuffs and handkerchiefs. This pattern features characteristic Jacobean motifs, such as the English Tudor rose and the Scottish Stuart thistle. Designs for lace came from contemporary pattern books published in England and continental Europe.(27/03/2003)
Credit line
Given by Mrs A. M. Wedgwood, in memory of Mrs A. A. Gordon Clark
Object history
Made in England
Summary
Object Type
Lace-making developed in England during the 16th century in response to the growth in personal wealth and to changes in fashionable dress. Needle lace, still then seen as a branch of embroidery, was made in professional workshops in London. But through the teaching of embroidery as a domestic skill, with needle lace stitches in the repertoire, lace was also made at home, for the decoration of household linen and clothing.

Ownership & Use
Lace was worn by both men and women in the 17th century. It could be made to shape for particular items like collars, or worked in lengths, as this piece has been, to be adapted for different purposes. The showiest effects were achieved with lace worn at the throat, setting off the face, and at the wrist. A fashionable man might even have matching lace borders on the tops of his stockings, turning down over his boots.

Materials & Making
This example is made with a thick linen thread, giving solid areas decorated with tiny voided patterns. It was worked in simple buttonhole stitches over an outlining thread which would have followed a parchment pattern.
Collection
Accession number
T.320-1975

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Record createdMarch 27, 2003
Record URL
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