The History of Lacemaking

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Stock #: 235639
Type: Postcard
Era: Continental Chrome
Publisher: Unicover Corporation
Postmark: 1987 Aug-14
PM City: Ypsilanti
PM State: MI
Stamp: 2c
Size: 4" x 5.75" (10.25 x 15 cm)

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First Day of Issue: August 14, 1987 First Issue Location: Ypsilant, Michigan The delicate art of lacemaking can trace its origins to late fifteenth century Italy and Flanders. Used as a decorative touch to apparel, lacemaking evolved from needlepoint work such as the Italian reticella (little net) cut work. A type of embroidery, lacemaking is not made from woven textiles, but rather from patterns worked in buttonhole stitches also known as punto in aria (stitch in the air). Lacemaking flourished in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, with several European nations developing one or more characteristic styles. Point de France, for example, was a low relief needle lace highlighted by decorative motifs balanced on a background of hexagonal mesh. In the periods of its greatest use and popularity -- as in the reign of French King Louis XIV -- lacemaking was considered a form of high art and patterns were drawn by official court painters. As the "New World' became settled, Europeans -- particularly the English and Spanish -- brought lacemaking to America

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