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'''Tambour lace''' refers to a family of lace made by stretching a fine net over a [[embroidery hoop|frame]] (the eponymous ''Tambour'', from the [[French language|French]] for drum) and creating a [[chain stitch]] using a fine hook to reach through the net and draw the working thread through the net.
'''Tambour lace''' refers to a family of lace made by stretching a fine net over a [[embroidery hoop|frame]] (the eponymous ''Tambour'', from the [[French language|French]] for drum) and creating a [[chain stitch]] using a fine hook to reach through the net and draw the working thread through the net.


The chain-stitch embroidery was used extensively in the Orient - Persia, India and china - many centuries ago but is thought not to have come to Europe until the seventeenth century. Little of it is heard of until the 1760's when translucent muslins from India, perhaps already tamboured with sprigs, were coming into fashion.
The chain-stitch embroidery was used extensively in the Orient - Persia, India and china - many centuries ago but is thought not to have come to Europe until the seventeenth century. Little of it is heard of until the 1760s when translucent muslins from India, perhaps already tamboured with sprigs, were coming into fashion.


In the second half of the eighteenth century and the early nineteenth, tambouring was a fashionable pastime for ladies of the French and English courts.
In the second half of the eighteenth century and the early nineteenth, tambouring was a fashionable pastime for ladies of the French and English courts.

Revision as of 13:30, 24 November 2015

lace from Lier

Tambour lace refers to a family of lace made by stretching a fine net over a frame (the eponymous Tambour, from the French for drum) and creating a chain stitch using a fine hook to reach through the net and draw the working thread through the net.

The chain-stitch embroidery was used extensively in the Orient - Persia, India and china - many centuries ago but is thought not to have come to Europe until the seventeenth century. Little of it is heard of until the 1760s when translucent muslins from India, perhaps already tamboured with sprigs, were coming into fashion.

In the second half of the eighteenth century and the early nineteenth, tambouring was a fashionable pastime for ladies of the French and English courts.

Although tambour is often a surface embroidery, it is used in Limerick lace.[1]

References

  1. ^ Pat Earnshaw. A Dictionary of Lace. Shire Publications. ISBN 0-85263-700-4.