- Binche lace
Binche lace is a Flemish
bobbin lace that originated inBinche , Belgium. It is continuous, meaning it is made all at once, in one piece. It is generally made in strips 2 inches (5 cm) wide.cite book |last= Deboeck |first= Guido |title= Flemish DNA & Ancestry: History of Three Families Over |url= http://books.google.com/books?id=gMFoRbjakCUC&pg=PA69&dq=Binche+lace&lr=&as_brr=3&client=opera&sig=vbQAWN0GhIU1pqqDNeTW7Z_qskI|accessdate= 2008-05-24|year= 2007|publisher= Dokus Publishing|isbn= 0972552677|pages= p.69] Though typically it has no cordonnet outlining the design against the ground, occasional pieces are made with a very fine one, about the same thickness as the thread used in the pattern. The pattern in Binche lace is very detailed, with animal scenes and figures.Binche lace is sometimes known as "Fairy lace".
History
Tradition says that Binche lace was started in the 15th century by lacemakers that moved to Binche from
Gent withMary of Burgundy , however there is no proof for this theory.cite web |url=http://belovedlinens.net/lace/BincheLace.html |title=Binche Lace |accessdate=2008-05-25] However, Binche lace was being made by the end of the 16th century. In 1585, when the riverScheldt was closed to shipping, Binche did not suffer a decline in its lacemaking as didAntwerp lace , which was made nearby. Binche lace was the subject of a royal edict in 1686, which implies that the lace must have been fairly important. The heyday of Binche lace was in the 18th century, when it was popular in Parisian circles.cite book|last=Palliser|first=Bury|title=History of Lace|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=viEMAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA122&dq=history+of+lace+binche+lace&client=opera|accessdate=2008-05-24|year=1984|month=November|publisher=Dover Publications|isbn=0486247422|pages=pp.121-122|quote=] It began to die out at the end of the 18th century, and was not made much during or after the 19th century. In 1862Victor Hugo mentioned Binche lace as the material of Cosette's wedding gown in "Les Misérables ", as he remembered it from his youth as being a lace of great beauty. The quality of Binche lace declined at the end of the 18th century, with the lace becoming coarser and the patterns less detailed. Originally Binche lace resembledValenciennes lace ."Binche." "The Oxford English Dictionary". 2nd ed. 1989.]In the 20th century there was another lace called Binche lace, that consisted of bobbin-made patterns sewn onto machine-made net, like
Brussels lace . However, it was of inferior quality, [cite book|last=Palliser|first=Bury|title=History of Lace|http://books.google.com/books?id=viEMAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA103&dq=history+of+lace+binche+lace&client=opera|accessdate=2008-05-26|year=1984|month=November|publisher=Dover Publications|isbn=0486247422|pages=p.103|quote=] and thus was never very common.References
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