History of Lace by Mrs. Bury Palliser
8. Mechlin.--All the laces of Flanders, with the exception of those of
Brussels and the point double, were known in commerce at this period under
the general name of Mechlin. (Fig. 17.)
Chapters
- Chapter 1 Ch.1
- CHAPTER I. Ch.2
- 2. Bisette.--A narrow, coarse thread pillow lace of three qualities, made Ch.3
- 3. Gueuse.--A thread lace, which owed to its simplicity {34}the name it Ch.4
- 4. Campane.[104]--A white, narrow, fine, thread pillow edging, used to sew Ch.5
- 5. Mignonette.[107]--A light, fine, pillow lace, called blonde de Ch.6
- 6. Point double, also called point de Paris and point des champs: point Ch.7
- 7. Valenciennes.--See Chapter XV. Ch.8
- 8. Mechlin.--All the laces of Flanders, with the exception of those of Ch.9
- 10. Guipure. Ch.10
- 1. Punto a reticella.[168]--Made either by drawing the threads of the Ch.11
- 4. Punto in aria.[171]--Worked on a parchment pattern, the flowers Ch.12
- 5. Punto tagliato a fogliami.[172]--The richest and most complicated of all Ch.13
- 7. Punto a maglia quadra.--Lacis; square netting,[178] the modano of the Ch.14
- 8. Burato.--The word means a stiff cloth or canvas (_toille clere_ of Ch.15
- 9. Punto tirato--Drawn work.[181] Fig. 25 is a lace ground {54}made by Ch.16
- introduction of it into my humble parish in Scotland, but on inquiry I was Ch.17
- 5. Fonneuse (grondwerkes), is charged with the open work (jours) in the Ch.18
- 6. Jointeuse, or attacheuse (lashwerkes), unites the different sections of Ch.19
- 7. Striqueuse, or appliqueuse (strikes), is charged with the sewing Ch.20
- introduction of bobbin net, the demand for blonde, on the contrary, had a Ch.21
- 1596. The fashion continued to the end of the eighteenth century. Ch.22