Showing posts with label collar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label collar. Show all posts
Friday, January 26, 2018
Victoria on PBS
Have you been watching the series 'Victoria' on your local PBS station? I certainly have. Beside the historical drama being very interesting, the costumes are also wonderful. The lace collars shown are particularly lovely.
Queen Victoria was a great patron of British lace making and her wedding dress was made of Honiton lace that was applied to a net background. In fact, all the materials used in her gown were British made. The dress was also trimmed with orange blossoms. Victoria was instrumental in making the white wedding dress popular as up until her wedding most brides wore coloured gown. For most brides of the era, wearing white was not an option as the wedding dress would usually be put into service as part of the everyday wardrobe and white was too impractical. Victoria reused much of the lace from her gown time and again and a some was even used for her Diamond Jubilee outfit.
Lace collars were a way of dressing up an otherwise plain dress and allowing for the area around the face to be prettily framed as well as the practical fact the collar could be removed and washed more easily than the rest of the garment.
Honiton lace has been made since the 1700's and was a cottage industry, with most lace pieces being made in the homes of the workers who were for the most part the wives of the poorly paid labourers and fisherman. These workers were often under the control of the shop owners who would in turn sell the finished product in London. It can take up to 5 hours to produce one square centimetre of lace. Large pieces such as collars and hankies could take up to 1,000 hours to make!
Labels:
collar,
Honiton,
lace,
PBS,
Queen Victoria,
Victoria,
wedding dress,
white
Thursday, November 10, 2016
Any Od Iron?
The title of the Blog post is a line from a music hall song (written by Charles Collins, Fred E. Terry and E.A. Sheppard). It is also the cry from the rag and bone man that used to travel the streets with his horse and cart collecting items no one wanted and giving them a cheap cup and saucer in return.
History lesson over, the reason for the blog title is once again one of my chapter members came to a meeting with collection of old irons she had found at various local auctions.
The first one she shared is a fluter, used to make the ruffles on maids caps; blouse collars etc.
The second is one really heavy iron that was heated on top of the stove and used.
The third one looks like a more modern iron in shape, but the lever at the back lifts up to reveal an opening that contains a piece of metal. The metal piece would have been heated in the coals and placed into the body of the iron.
History lesson over, the reason for the blog title is once again one of my chapter members came to a meeting with collection of old irons she had found at various local auctions.
The first one she shared is a fluter, used to make the ruffles on maids caps; blouse collars etc.
The second is one really heavy iron that was heated on top of the stove and used.
So do you have any old iron?
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