500 Years of Lace History ft. Elena Kanagy-Loux

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  • Опубликовано: 24 мар 2023
  • To find out what Dan and Lara found whilst mudlarking and get 50% off your first 3 months of History Hit, be sure to use this link and enter code VBIRCHWOOD at checkout: access.historyhit.com/checkou...
    Thank you so much to History Hit for sponsoring this video!
    In this episode, I interview textile and lace historian Elena Kanagy-Loux, on 500 Years of Lace History, an incredibly exciting and fascinating topic! Elena moves from the 1400s until the 1900s, explaining how lace and lacemaking have evolved and developed throughout the world during those time frames. It was such a pleasure to facilitate this conversation, and I learned so much from listening to Elena and her incredible knowledge about historical fashion and lacemaking.
    If you'd like to follow Elena on social media, her channels can be found here:
    / erenanaomi
    / erenanaomi
    Thank you so much for watching and see you all in two weeks for another video!
    Public domain pattern books for early lacemaking:
    archive.org/details/early-mod...
    Due to a character count limit, image sources can be found here:
    www.vbirchwood.com/sources/50...
    #500Yearsof #Lace #HistoricalFashion

Комментарии • 298

  • @VBirchwood
    @VBirchwood  Год назад +19

    To find out what Dan and Lara found whilst mudlarking and get 50% off your first 3 months of History Hit, be sure to use this link and enter code VBIRCHWOOD at checkout: access.historyhit.com/checkout/subscribe/purchase?code=vbirchwood&plan=monthly
    Thank you so much to History Hit for sponsoring this video!

  • @kirstenpaff8946
    @kirstenpaff8946 Год назад +183

    I find it fascinating that lacemaking was spread through books, since it implies a fairly high level of female literacy among the working class.

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +31

      Very true!

    • @MissingRaptor
      @MissingRaptor Год назад +19

      I recall that at some point girls had to go to lace making school to learn lace making during the Victorian/Edwardian eras. I imagine that it was common for them to learn some basic literacy as well.

    • @kirstenpaff8946
      @kirstenpaff8946 Год назад +16

      @@MissingRaptor Yes, it was definitely common for girls to receive at least a basic education (reading, writing, etc.) at public schools by the late 19th century. I was referring to the part of the video, however, that discussed the spread of lacemaking through books in the 16th and 17th century, a time period when literacy was less common.

    • @raquelnunes9793
      @raquelnunes9793 Год назад +9

      @@kirstenpaff8946 i imagine there be also a few learning from the book and then teaching it to others in the community.

    • @iwonaluzny4759
      @iwonaluzny4759 Год назад

      ​@@MissingRaptortd

  • @b1laxson
    @b1laxson Год назад +29

    Oh what a tangled weave we weave when first we weave lace

  • @Noel.Chmielowiec
    @Noel.Chmielowiec Год назад +120

    Elena seems like a person who could talk about what she loves for hours, and I could listen to her for said hours. It's fascinating that needle lace evolved from embroidery, as a resource saving technique. I absolutely loved this video, as much as I love wearing lace ❤

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +5

      So glad you loved the video! ❤️

    • @Noel.Chmielowiec
      @Noel.Chmielowiec Год назад +5

      ​@@VBirchwood In fact it was quite a nice surprise, because earlier I thought about mending my lace dress and there you are with amazing video about lace ❤

    • @MaryMangan
      @MaryMangan Год назад +3

      I think she's the top ambassador that we have for lace. She's a powerhouse and deep, besides being incredibly talented at the artwork.

    • @maryseman7019
      @maryseman7019 Год назад +1

      @@VBirchwood My grandma taught me to shuttle tat. What kind of lace is that?

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Год назад

      @@maryseman7019 - It sounds like "tatting". The shuttle my mother used was made of metal, about 3-1/2 inches long, shaped a bit like an elongated football, with a bobbin that would pop out of the middle where the thread was wound. On the end of the shuttle, there's a hook.

  • @marief9858
    @marief9858 Год назад +122

    I love that she points out there is no way a mother with a home and children and laundry is going to be making lace in her 'off time' even as a modern Mom who wants to learn lace, I'm purposefully waiting until my kids get significantly older before I even attempt it just due to time and not wanting to be mad when my kids try to help me.

    • @jrelliott6550
      @jrelliott6550 Год назад +16

      Just my two cents.... don't wait! If you enjoy it after all, you'll have years of experience at that point. You'll always be able to find 5 minutes here and there to make a stitch, and when the house is empty and quiet you can dedicate all the time to creating.

    • @marief9858
      @marief9858 Год назад +9

      @@jrelliott6550 I do agree with you! I work full time often traveling so I prioritize my hobbies off of ones that the kids either enjoy being involved with or enjoy the final product of (the love sewing with me and picking out costumes or patterns for clothes, and the like the little crochet characters we make together) that is why I say something like lace making they aren't interested in so I can wait to do that when they are doing their own thing and don't want as much time with Mom and I'm not chasing / ferrying them around as much! Who knows maybe when they reach highschool they might be more interested in lace making with me!

    • @saraa3418
      @saraa3418 Год назад +11

      I started knitting as a way to craft safely around my kids when they were little. It wasn't mentioned in the video, but knitted lace exists and can be as simple or complicated as you want. I've knitted toys, clothes, accessories, and doll clothes for my kids and they wear them happily until they fall apart.

    • @marief9858
      @marief9858 Год назад +7

      @@saraa3418 I do crochet lace as well, I can't wait to learn tatting though!

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +2

      @@marief9858
      Tatting is a very nice and compact hobby that can be done in quite small increments. A ring now, a chain then, and it all adds up, and each tiny element can be made in just a couple of minutes.

  • @cindyfrye3026
    @cindyfrye3026 Год назад +38

    I'm surprised that knitted lace was not covered. Shetland lace is beautiful and struggling to be passed on to younger generations. Queen Victoria started the interest in it originally.

    • @craftinghome
      @craftinghome Год назад +3

      My great grandmother used to make a bit of extra household income from supplying knitted lace to the local haberdashery. Apparently she didn't refer to any patterns, she'd learned them and kept all the information in her head, so she could produce yards and yards of it.

    • @cindyfrye3026
      @cindyfrye3026 Год назад +3

      @@craftinghome My Aunt makes knitted baby blankets, kitchen washcloths and hand towel sets, and other stuff for the annual church auction fund raiser. A lot of times, she just makes it up as she goes along. I bet your great grandmother did some of that too.

    • @afafaakaka562
      @afafaakaka562 2 месяца назад +2

      There are also traditional knitted Orenburg lace shawls made out of goat down. A full size one, which I guess is about 1*1 meter in size, is so thin and delicate it can be pulled through a wedding band

  • @MijnWolden
    @MijnWolden Год назад +77

    I find it heartbreaking as a Flemish spinner and crafter that we had such highstanding textile industry, both our lace industry and wool industry, that also produced super luxurious cloth sold all over the world, and now it is practically non-existent. Lace is made as a tourist trap in Brussels and Bruges mostly now...

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +13

      It’s definitely extremely heartbreaking. I hope efforts for it to be revived continue.

    • @Jo-Anne.Clarke
      @Jo-Anne.Clarke Год назад +6

      Is anyone familiar with the term Flemish Fingertip Lace? A grandmother born at the turn of the century in now Belgium, would not teach it to my friend, her granddaughter. Her rationale was very personal. If you don’t know it, you’ll never be able to earn a living by it. I’ve searched Fingertip Lace and have never found the term. My friend was born in Belgium during WWII.

    • @belleplummer2924
      @belleplummer2924 Год назад +5

      I had the privilege of attending a demonstration of bobbin kace making by an elder Flemish woman who Saud that she learned the craft from her family's servant and had to practice on the sly as her mother thought this activity was not for well-off girls from good families.

    • @simpleshoes
      @simpleshoes Год назад +1

      My great aunt who was born in Belgium and emigrated to Canada could make lovely bobbin lace. I always wanted to learn how to do it from her but never found the time and I really regret it.

    • @mariakjartansdottir3135
      @mariakjartansdottir3135 4 месяца назад

      My grandmother was going to teach me bobbin lace making, but we didn't find time to do it. It's still on my list to learn and I still have some very old supplies from my grandmother ❤

  • @joccoakirkpatrick2183
    @joccoakirkpatrick2183 Год назад +33

    I did not think I'd spend an hour learning about lace, but this was really cool

  • @joannebishop3295
    @joannebishop3295 Год назад +19

    Her enthusiasm is contagious!

  • @janetgies8698
    @janetgies8698 Год назад +4

    I have longed for this Lace History Lesson for 40 years. I will be watching this again and sending it to the ladies in my Antiques Club. ❤😂🎉. She speaks so well! 👏🏻🤍

  • @therewillbecatswithgwenhwyfar
    @therewillbecatswithgwenhwyfar Год назад +10

    I do NOT need another hobby!
    I do NOT need another hobby!
    I do NOT need another hobby!

    • @EmilyKresl
      @EmilyKresl 10 дней назад

      But the sounds of the bobbins clacking is so soothing 😂

  • @TheGabygael
    @TheGabygael Год назад +25

    as a belgian who had most of his ancestors being weavers and spinners around the kortrijk's region and even a set of great great grandmothers who were lacemakers from antwerp, and as a hobbyist who's become obsessed in linen goods and historical textiles (the movement and drape of most historical textiles was exquisite and it's probably why most reenactors' dress tend to look bland imo) it saddens me to realise that the skills i really want to learn about would have be common less than 200 years ago. I guess i wouldn't want their lives and the price to pay for this knowledge would have been being forced into this trade at a time when it would be not a secure one, but i guess i found what subject i could focus on in my craft and research going forwards. Sucks that i couldn't make those super transluscent flemish linen veils seen in 16th century portraiture

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +5

      For those finest veils you need spinners who can make the thread to make the lace from.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Год назад +3

      @Gabriel Hanssens - I saw a video not long ago about various olden arts. It mentioned the fine linen that was made long past and how there is currently a group of people in India who are trying to revive the flax variety used and to revive the techniques of spinning and weaving with it. It may be a while before this is again re-established (if ever) and will probably be very expensive, but it could be coming in your future.

    • @Lara-jp4xk
      @Lara-jp4xk 11 месяцев назад +2

      I've watched a video about history of lace made in Croatia. One region used agave plant threads for it, and the threads looked way thinner than the ones made of cotton (or linen?).

  • @VioletFem
    @VioletFem Год назад +24

    I love Elena!!!! So glad you interviewed her.

  • @moniqueleigh
    @moniqueleigh Год назад +5

    As someone who's been making lace regularly since at least 2001, I'm so sorry that she had difficulty finding the various websites that shared techniques and patterns back then. I know when I first tried to learn tatting (around 1998-ish), it was very difficult to find anything online at first (and all I had to learn were some.... rather poor illustrations). Within a couple of years, I had found several forums and email lists of tatters and other lace-makers who helped me figure out what I was doing wrong. And LOTS of videos, which were invaluable! By 2004, at least, websites with patterns were starting to pick up and be found by search engines even if you weren't a member of the forums. I still need to find a few extra hours/weeks/years to learn ALL THE TECHNIQUES! lol - 'Til then, I'll just have to enjoy my tatting, knitting, & occasional crochet.

    • @maryannraley
      @maryannraley 6 месяцев назад +1

      I learned to tat in the mid-80's, but was taught by a friend. There was an American magazine called "The Workbasket" published starting in the 1930's that had tatting patterns. It's now available on line in one of the pattern archives. I have some of my great-grandmother's tatting, made from thread almost as fine as sewing thread. I aspire to manage that.

  • @iainmc9859
    @iainmc9859 Год назад +10

    Fascinating. There are certain crafts/livelihoods that have a level of commitment and intricacy that deserve more recognition, lace making, dry stone walling, miniature painting to name but a few. Tying my own laces is a mental stretch for me some mornings 🤔

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Год назад +1

      @Iain Mc - I know exactly what you mean!

  • @AshLG
    @AshLG Год назад +16

    Usually I have videos like this on in the background while I'm doing something else, but there was so much incredible information that I had to give it my full attention! I love Elena's work and it was incredible to hear her speak in so much detail

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +1

      So glad you enjoyed it Ash! I felt really captivated by everything Elena was saying too and had hoped others would feel the same! ❤️

  • @SimpleDesertRose
    @SimpleDesertRose Год назад +16

    Sorry I'm late for the party, youtube failed to notify me and I was off on my weeks. However I did get a lot out of this video! Elena is such a wealth of knowledge. My danish great grandmother used to do some amazing needle lace. After this video it makes so much more sense now about the story that her family sold lace to pay for their passage to America right around the time she was born in the late 1890's. She taught her daughter and tried to teach her granddaughters as well, but they never had any desire to do anything with it. There were other things that are now considered crafts that she tried to teach them they they had no intrest in either. By that time, the world had changed and didn't appreciate things like lace as it did back in my great grandmother's day. She used to knit and crochet too but today we only have a few throw blankets that she made that survive. At the time they were customers made knock offs of what was popular at the time that she could still make with her arthritic hands. Sadly she didn't live long enough to teach me anything. She tried to teach my mom to knit and crochet but my mom never had any intrest. It saddens me to think of all that was lost to history not only with the passing of my great grandmother but all the unnamed women throughout history who had this unique skill that was such a big part of history at one time. However, it's also good to see that people are striving to bring the quality handmade items back. I guess you could say that it's sort of a renaissance of these skills if you will. Than you so much for having these 500 years videos. They have been so informative!

    • @lysem4392
      @lysem4392 Год назад +2

      Same here, in a way. My paternal grandmother knew how to spin wool, and I would have been thrilled to learn! I'm sure she would have been doubly thrilled to show me, but my mother did not even want me to ask my grandmother. She didn't want me to "bother" her. I still regret this opportunity passed by both my grandmother and myself.

  • @kerriemckinstry-jett8625
    @kerriemckinstry-jett8625 Год назад +10

    Awesome educational video! Thank you. I'm one of those weird people who likes knitting lace more than pretty much any other kind of knitting. I love using size 0, 00, or 000 needles and crochet thread to create elaborate lace doilies. One of my grandmothers used to crochet doilies. Not many people use them these days. I love seeing how people use lace in clothing, though. 😊

  • @KateandBree
    @KateandBree Год назад +4

    I love that Elena shared quotes from a disabled nun. Being disabled myself, I knew a bit about this myself but I loved hearing someone who was abled to talk the practice of aristocrats sending disabled women to convents and this was cruel; it was much kinder than some of the alternatives, but it was still a cruel practice.
    Before I was born, my mom had the opportunity in Germany to watch some Bamberg (where I was born) tatters tatt some lace. She never saw hands move so fast! My great-aunts could tatt and bobbin lace; I'm sad this wasn't passed down to any of us girls.

  • @karladenton5034
    @karladenton5034 Год назад +11

    Excellent interview and a very knowledgeable guest! I know that there's no way to even briefly mention every technique in an hour long lecture, but I'd like to give a shout out to knitted lace. The famous Shetland 'ring' shawls are on my 'bucket list' goals as a knitter.

  • @rudetuesday
    @rudetuesday Год назад +19

    The variety of books over at Internet Archive is so good. I'm spending more time with at least a couple of them. Thanks for this video. I really enjoyed seeing the different types of lace and hearing about materials.

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +3

      The variety is really amazing over there, so many priceless resources! Glad you enjoyed the video!

  • @laurawilliams7782
    @laurawilliams7782 Год назад +20

    This was very educational. I'd love to learn more about lace traditions outside europe that were mentioned

  • @vincentbriggs1780
    @vincentbriggs1780 Год назад +6

    That was fascinating! I don't know much at all about lace, and it's wonderful to hear her talk so passionately about it.
    The steam train lace at 43:40 is SO COOL!!!
    I also really love the little Paraguayan needle lace circles. The Met has some handkerchiefs made with those, and they're just delightful.

    • @lysem4392
      @lysem4392 Год назад +1

      I agree about the lace steam train! Tenerife lace doesn't do it for me, but tastes vary, and that is fine.

  • @The_Crafting_Gamer
    @The_Crafting_Gamer Год назад +3

    I am a bobbin lace maker from Denmark and we have a lot of history with it

  • @EagleRue
    @EagleRue Год назад +5

    Makes me want to get my bobbin lace pillow out again and start back!

  • @prettywiltsforthee4763
    @prettywiltsforthee4763 Год назад +17

    Let me tell you this was amazing! The length intimidated me but time flew by so fast! I actually already knew Elena and followed her on insta after i discovered her work for "Threads of Power" in my reels so this collab took me by extremely pleasant suprise.

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +3

      Really glad you enjoyed the video! I debated on releasing such a long video, but had the same feeling that Elena’s words were so riveting that people simply had to hear the entire presentation. Each section carries such a plethora of knowledge.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Год назад

      @@VBirchwood - And you were correct!

  • @aicirtkciub9167
    @aicirtkciub9167 Год назад +3

    I never knew I could watch an hour long video about lace ! Really cool interesting history and beautiful stunning designs. I always wondered about the beautiful lace worn by Elizabeth 1.

  • @sillybeeful
    @sillybeeful Год назад +4

    My goodness this is a tour de force… what a wealth of eloquent knowledge. Fantastic use of contemporary images as well. Thank you both 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🥃🥃🥃

  • @lisar9800
    @lisar9800 Год назад +6

    Thank you so much for this interesting video and making clear to me that I can also do bobbin lace. I grew up in a region in Germany, that is also quite known for Bobbin lace, passementerie and wooden Christmas decorations. I began doing it at the age of 6 in primary school and was in an after school club that taught it. There would be three adults who watched over little girls all doing our bobbin lace. Now that I think about it I did soooo many things and I can still do it, even the sing sang to remember the various patterns in which you can make the lace. I never thought of it as special, just some culture thing which I stopped once I went to secondary school. Now that I know that I'll have to ask my mother where my pillow and my pillow stand went, buy some thread and make my own lace I never found on the internet. Thank you so much!

  • @soniatriana9091
    @soniatriana9091 Год назад +2

    What an intriguing & impressive insight into the Lace making history. How sad that parents sent their daughters away to Convents because of the custom of paying dowries for their daughter’s wedding. And to learn that orphanages were owned as a Lace making business!! Thank you Elena! Your passion & extensive knowledge is impressive! It’s nice to know you are much appreciated by the Academic Society!! Bravo to you!! What a beautiful field to study!!

  • @enariva669
    @enariva669 Год назад +4

    Will definitely think of lace differently now, so interesting to hear about the women who made it centuries ago

  • @s.maskell7134
    @s.maskell7134 Год назад +2

    Lacemaking was a cash product which was rare in the 'lower classes'. Same with those who plaited straw for hats. Or girls who could make rugs in Persia .Or the production knitters. It made those skilled more valuable.

  • @YasuTaniina
    @YasuTaniina Год назад +2

    As an American who has a mom that taught me how to tat, the few people I've met that have even heard of tatting all know that it uses a shuttle and knots. I've never heard anyone use tatting as a general term for lace

  • @anthonystark6379
    @anthonystark6379 2 месяца назад

    So, I'm watching this a second time a year later.
    This was the video that kickstarted my dive into lacemaking, falling in love with the punto in aria at first sight. I went first into crochet, then into knitting, and now *finally* I'm on day four or five of learning punto in aria. It took a whole year to get here, and this video comes back across my feed to remind me where I got started 💜

  • @johnnzboy
    @johnnzboy Год назад

    What a pleasure to listen to the knowledgeable Ms Kanagy-Loux.

  • @katmandudawn8417
    @katmandudawn8417 Год назад +1

    My college roommate had learned tatting from her grandmother. I don’t know the difference between tatting and lace making but what she did involved bobbins.
    I inherited a trove of lace from my grandmother, great aunt and great grandmother.
    The family was wealthy enough to travel to Europe some.
    I think some of the lace was bought over there.
    There is one piece that has a fabulous Pan playing his pipes.
    Most of the lace had been used then salvaged for further use.
    I used some of the lace to make a lovely christening gown that I dressed 2 of my children in for their baptisms. I wanted to use some of the family lace for the new generation.
    It doesn’t look like there will be any further generations but I still love how the christening gown turned out and live the connection through the ages.
    This was very interesting. I am a long time embroiderer myself.

  • @matiasthered
    @matiasthered Год назад +7

    This episode was so good. I have followed Elena on Instagram for awhile and it was so interesting to listen to her talking about lace. 😊

  • @lacybookworm5039
    @lacybookworm5039 Год назад +5

    What about knitting lace shawls?

    • @lindahoward3410
      @lindahoward3410 Год назад +1

      Shawls were made in Nottingham, many of my ancestors worked in the lace industry and my great great great grandfather designed lace shawls and was quite famous for it at the time.

  • @mariellouise1
    @mariellouise1 Год назад +1

    When I was at the Victoria and Albert Museum I pulled out drawers of lace but I had to stop because I was swept with a very strange feeling that these represented so much work and distress of the individuals who made them.

  • @DreamseedVR
    @DreamseedVR 6 месяцев назад

    As somebody who used to live down the street from the lace museum. I cannot recommend enough that people make that pilgrimage and go visit it in person and support them and buy stuff from them. Because it is the willy wonka's factory of lace and you will never see anything so beautiful in your life lace related

  • @happydays1607
    @happydays1607 2 месяца назад

    I am from Czech and learned lacemaking when I was 13 :) .. still have bobbins and sometimes make some samples ...so nice to hear the history in such detail :)

  • @savinathewhite
    @savinathewhite Год назад +1

    I would love to introduce you to the lacemakers in Offida, Italy, who are my friends. Their traditions go back centuries, and the lace is still made today using the patterns from that time period!

  • @claudiaaugusta8453
    @claudiaaugusta8453 Год назад +3

    I love this wealth of detail information!

  • @JayCWhiteCloud
    @JayCWhiteCloud Год назад +5

    This was really good...Thanks for sharing it...!!!...I had to save it...!!!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +1

      Hope you enjoy watching! 😊

  • @kelkanta
    @kelkanta 4 месяца назад

    learning lace history (500 years?! woah) from ms. Elena Kanagy-Loux was awesome! perfect listen while hand stitching lace

  • @dt5092
    @dt5092 Год назад +7

    Fascinating interview and so well produced! I loved the early examples of lace from the Americas.

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад

      Thank you!! It was quite the edit 😅

  • @agnieszkaglowacka3724
    @agnieszkaglowacka3724 Год назад +2

    What an excellent and valuable video!
    Thank you!

  • @essiroiha9781
    @essiroiha9781 Год назад +5

    This was so interesting, thank you! I learned so much.

  • @catherinejustcatherine1778
    @catherinejustcatherine1778 Год назад +2

    What an extensive lecture.
    Thank you both for putting so much time and effort into this video.
    Handmade lace is so awe-inspiring.

  • @jeannegreeneyes1319
    @jeannegreeneyes1319 Год назад

    Great interview! Thank you for covering this subject and having Ms. Elena Kanagy-Loux as a speaker. 💗🕸💖

  • @dawsie
    @dawsie Год назад +3

    I’m loving the 500 years of history, so glad you have done this subject I just love lace, I have been teaching myself on lace making, at the moment I am working my crochet lace which is a design I made, unlike needle & bobbing lace, I have to follow the rules of crochet but I love the challenge.
    I have tried tatting but for some reason my fingers turn into all thumbs 😹😹😹and my brain hates it but I love some of the works from tatting, it’s just I’m not able to get my head and hands to work together to make anything in the tatting method 😹😹 when I found crochet lace well I hit the ground running and been loving it since I found it a year ago all because I was looking for lace for a gown I have designed. I found I had to learn how to make my own lace as I just could not find anything I like in a my budget and also made from natural fibers. I found plenty of acrylic, polyester and nylon lace perfect in design but I am making my new clothes from only natural fibers as the man made ones just keeps getting me zapped every time I go to get things of the supermarket shelf or push the buttons for the elevator 😹😹opening doors with metal handles and at the age of 60 and 8 days🙀😹😹 I’m just fed up with it😹😹
    I will have to look into some of those online lessons for lace making I just love learning new talents to add to my growing list of skills.

  • @AmaltheaVimes
    @AmaltheaVimes 2 месяца назад

    Yaay! How exciting! This video has been great fun to watch! Last year I visited St Galen to see the Textile museum, and saw the hand-cranked embroidery machine (and the little old lady who runs it!), it was fascinating! Unfortunately missed your beautiful red lace piece - the museum was between exhibits at the time. The second large lace machine shown in the video here, the one with the small metal bobbins (shuttle bobbins, like in some of the old shuttle-bobbin sewing machines), was (with other machines and lace examples - this was a better museum, IMO, and the fella at the desk was super nice and informative!) at the Saurer Museum, in Arbon, Switzerland, directly on the shore of the Bodensee. It is a cool museum with both awesome old textiles machines, AND old-timey Swiss vehicles! It is set up in the old-style - which means that there are plenty of wonderful smells (oils and machines!) and lots to see! No minimalism boring "modern" museum set up! There is also a little cafe in the building, and it's just a really nice place to go. The floor is tiled with wood blocks, and makes a satisfying noise when walked upon. I hope this museum never changes.

  • @carolyng5235
    @carolyng5235 Год назад +5

    Wonderful video! Informative and interesting, with a charming and talented guest. I love the 500 years of . . . series!!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +1

      Glad you enjoyed the video Carolyn! 😊

  • @vanessareagan3497
    @vanessareagan3497 Год назад

    It’s so nice to have a person like Elena speak about lace - she makes a subject which could potentially be boring coming from someone who doesn’t have the same passion for lace.
    She’s very interesting, knowledgeable and talented.
    Queen Victoria’s youngest child Princess Beatrice was a collector of historic laces and is said to have owned a piece of fabric from a gown of Catherine of Aragon.

  • @CrystalMouse1
    @CrystalMouse1 Год назад +1

    Spotted bobbin lacing in the film the Scarlet Letter’ with Demi Moore

  • @nat6098
    @nat6098 Год назад +1

    My only problem with this video is now I really want to try bobbin lace even though I already have a bunch of other hobbies. I guess I could always add it into the cycle of hobbies where I get tired or uninspired by one so I move onto the next so after a while I'm feeling good enough to go back to the first.

  • @rowenazuercher5363
    @rowenazuercher5363 Год назад +3

    !!! I'm so excited about this video!! So glad you did this interview:)

  • @lazybelphegore6748
    @lazybelphegore6748 8 месяцев назад

    I would just like to say Elena, that is the most beautiful hair color I have ever seen. I don’t think I have seen this color before, or if I have it wasn’t done this well. Most people who dye their hair bright garish colors. This is so subtle that it took me a little while to realize it was colored. And that is what makes it so good, it must have been done by a very professional colorist. And that icy pale blue is one of my favorite colors.

  • @jennylawson1980
    @jennylawson1980 Год назад

    When I was a child I wore lace to my aunt's wedding, I remember feeling like I could have lived during the height of the lace making industry. It made me feel like a princess.
    Lace tells a story, it has a deeply imbedded history. Ive been doing embroidery work, since I was three when I was taught by my great grandmother and grandmother for 40 years, now I have advanced into tapestry and thread painting work, some of the stitches are the same in lace and it's beautiful when the different forms of thread art can come together 😊
    Wonderful lesson, beautiful history and ty for keeping lacemaking alive. 😊

  • @patstoughton
    @patstoughton Год назад

    I love little Prince Louis. I could watch him for a long time and never get tired of his antics. He is a breath of fresh air.

  • @cynthiaLibrarian
    @cynthiaLibrarian Год назад

    I love the concentrated info. I saw someone do bobbin lace at a local textile exhibition. This is a lost art and not appreciated. Grandmas' lace veil is just netting to them. Thanks for bringing this to the general public!

  • @BeatlesFanSonia
    @BeatlesFanSonia Год назад

    I loved this video. Years ago I found a book on lacemaking history in a friend’s library. I was fascinated and I couldn’t put the book down. Later on, when I returned home, I found that the lady I had been visiting sent me the book as a present. I have done tatted lace and crochet lace. I haven’t tried bobbin lace because it seems beyond my abilities.

  • @dianeknight4839
    @dianeknight4839 Год назад

    In 1967 on holiday in Italy we visited a convent on one of the islands of Venice. There were girls in a classroom, some as young as 6, learning and making lace.

  • @eiszapfenkobold
    @eiszapfenkobold Год назад +2

    Love her lace content and overall fashion style.

  • @SpringNotes
    @SpringNotes Год назад

    What a wealth of knowledge Elena has. Such a great teacher !
    And Vasi, from the side profile position, you look like that painting. I forget who it's by. You know what I'm talking about, right ?

  • @manicantsettleonausername6789
    @manicantsettleonausername6789 Год назад

    This was so wonderful

  • @Grace-ms7un
    @Grace-ms7un Год назад +2

    This is amazing 👏

  • @kzen9
    @kzen9 Год назад +2

    This has been the best hour I’ve spent on RUclips in a while! Thank you for this very educational video. I love history & textiles so this was a beautiful combination of those 2 loves ❤. I hope to see more from your channel soon & your expert, Elena, was excellent in instruction as well as in storytelling that brings history to life.

  • @IsabellaSchicho
    @IsabellaSchicho Год назад +1

    I love this so much. I just started taking bobbin lace classes. My love and admiration for lace and the craftsmanship have grown so much.

  • @rmp9849
    @rmp9849 Год назад +1

    Yeah I could listen to this young lady talk forever!! Very interesting topic but she’s very knowledgeable and at the same time does also let’s you know when she’s not sure about something. She also makes you want you to investigate the topic. At least that’s how I felt. I would pay to hear a lecture by her.

  • @coypeahen
    @coypeahen Месяц назад

    Bobbin lace was used by missionaries as a tool of Evangelism, where I come from in South India. Widows and women of lower castes who wanted their children educated by the missionaries were encouraged to take up embroidery, bobbin lace, Bruges lace, petit point, cross stitch, tapestry making, and cut work to earn their living. The old municipal records still show my mother in law’s mother recorded as master lace maker, which meant she drew and devised patterns for the other women to do. A lot of it is lost now, but they do still embroider the same patterns as were designed a 100 years ago. It is still a means for women to earn a wage. And engage during the free hours. And most of the business still is with the Protestant church.

  • @debcarroll8192
    @debcarroll8192 Год назад +3

    Fascinating! Thank you!

  • @vivettekontoulis3061
    @vivettekontoulis3061 Год назад

    This is so interesting, really enjoyed it!

  • @marynimocks6791
    @marynimocks6791 Год назад +1

    Outstanding! 👏👏👏

  • @happycrabknits9109
    @happycrabknits9109 Год назад

    This was very fascinating! Loved the history

  • @bierjip1
    @bierjip1 Год назад

    Great interview!

  • @jangeston2644
    @jangeston2644 Год назад +1

    Such an interesting history! Thank you

  • @Nanabanana464
    @Nanabanana464 Год назад

    Fantastic lecture, thank you so much!

  • @alexisconnergaming6793
    @alexisconnergaming6793 Год назад

    I saw a video a few weeks ago about some ladies that were making fishing bets by hand and then hand embroidering them. I'm glad I found this video because I find these techniques super interesting 🥰

  • @katienewell7350
    @katienewell7350 Год назад

    This was an awesome video!!!

  • @robinmarks5638
    @robinmarks5638 Год назад

    Oh this is wonderful! So interesting! Thank you!

  • @jeanninecook6661
    @jeanninecook6661 Год назад

    Fascinating! Thank you for this video. I truly enjoyed it.

  • @lisascenic
    @lisascenic Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for this fascinating discussion of the history of lace.

  • @skolljumper
    @skolljumper Год назад +2

    Well now I want to make lace

  • @theglitterballlifestyle675
    @theglitterballlifestyle675 Год назад +10

    This videos so good 😍 Crochet lace is so simple compared to so many laces mentioned here

    • @dawsie
      @dawsie Год назад +4

      As someone who has taken up making crochet lace, this is so not true some crochet lace is very intercut and takes just as many hours as bobbin and needle lace. I am working on a piece that has already taken me 3 months just for the half meter and I need 5 metres all up. I’m using a .5mm hook. With bobbin lace and needle lace they work in one direction which makes it easier in the long run, but with crochet lace some of the designs goes around in on its self to get a piece that is 6 inches wide, this is how the one I am working on now goes.

    • @theglitterballlifestyle675
      @theglitterballlifestyle675 Год назад +1

      ​@@dawsie I crochet lace too, my current project is 15 meters of edging using an 1860s pattern a .5 needle as well.... And construction wise even if it takes alot of time imo its still easier to do and learn than bobbin lace or needle lace. It still takes hours but if you know the basic crochet stitches you can work out lace making.

    • @ragnkja
      @ragnkja Год назад +1

      @@theglitterballlifestyle675
      And experienced makers of bobbin lace say that if you can count to three you can make bobbin lace.

  • @janetclark8754
    @janetclark8754 Год назад

    awesome presentation!!!!

  • @ljshaw8516
    @ljshaw8516 Год назад

    I am a lace addict! I put it on everything. Thanks for this great video. Excellent !!!

  • @Jo-Anne.Clarke
    @Jo-Anne.Clarke Год назад

    A very enjoyable presentation. ❤

  • @sleepydrJ
    @sleepydrJ Год назад

    Fantastically interesting!

  • @lauraoergel6003
    @lauraoergel6003 Год назад +2

    This is so fascinating!!! I love the addition of experts to your own wonderful style!

  • @jcristi321
    @jcristi321 Год назад

    Excellent presentation! Thanks so much.

  • @AliciaB.
    @AliciaB. Год назад

    fantastically useful video

  • @audriscarborough9309
    @audriscarborough9309 Год назад +2

    Thanks!

    • @VBirchwood
      @VBirchwood  Год назад +2

      Thanks so much Audri ❤️

  • @RainyDayBricks
    @RainyDayBricks Год назад +1

    This was great 👍 I love this whole series, thank you ☺️

  • @juls_krsslr7908
    @juls_krsslr7908 11 месяцев назад

    This was so interesting! Thank you and Elena for making this video!

  • @sunriseeyes0
    @sunriseeyes0 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much for having this presentation! I’ve finally started learning crochet because I want to make lace 💗🙏🏽🧶

  • @robintheparttimesewer6798
    @robintheparttimesewer6798 Год назад +3

    What a wonderful interview! There’s so much to learn. I need more time! I have always been fascinated by cut work and lace making. I’m hoping to someday have a go at learning.
    Thank you for a wonderful interview though you might need to have her back. I have a feeling we only skimmed the edges of the topic. Maybe sub-topics for all the different kinds of lace.

  • @hazeluzzell
    @hazeluzzell Год назад

    I do Sprang. It’s a fascinating technique.Fingerloop braiding is pretty, too.

  • @partyfiesta1557
    @partyfiesta1557 Год назад +1

    You’ve made my day! Such an amazing video. Thanks a lot. Hugs from Provence, Adrien

  • @ing-mariekoppel1637
    @ing-mariekoppel1637 7 месяцев назад

    You look fantastic in that outfit !! Really must say. The combo of the linen cap and lace band with the little red flower is gorgeous.