Take a look around your home, and if you're like most people it will seem like so much of what fills the world around you comes from relatively modern times.
Take a look around your
home, and if you're like most people it will seem like so much of what fills
the world around you comes from relatively modern times. Oh sure there will be things there with
origins that go back hundreds of years but for the most part, if you stop and
think about it, so many things like your car or truck and for sure all the
electrical components in your home are relatively new.
Lace is one of the very few
things you'll find in your home with origins that go back thousands of years,
and in fact just how far the history of lace goes back remains open for
speculation and debate. Also, just like so many things in the US that were
brought back across the Atlantic to the US from overseas, it was war and
conflict that brought lace to the UK from Europe.
The Romans brought it over
with them about 2000 years ago when they came by ships to invade what was then
known as the island
of Britannia. At that
time the island
of Britain was a rough
hostile land that was populated by tribal cultures that were far from having
the technology to create something as intricate and delicate as fine lace.
Many historians speculate
that it was Phoenician traders who first discovered and traded in lace that
they picked up somewhere in their travels around the Mediterranean.
Now where they picked it up is anyone's guess but there is one theory on the
actual development of lace, which is from a region where the wives of fishermen
first began to experiment with it. All you have to do is look at footage or
photographs of fishermen repairing their nets along the waterfront and you can
see the same methodology and the same tools that they use only to a much larger
scale. So it's perfectly plausible that thousand years ago after returning home
from working on the docks repairing nets that women would then spend the rest
of the day using the same tools and technology experimenting with lace.
Something worth noting here though
is that mass-produced lace that's created on machines at factories is
relatively new. You see, it's only with the last handful of decades that the
technology even existed, so prior to that it was always made by hand. What this
means, is that it's only in recent times that good high-quality lace that you
can find for sale at reasonable prices around town was available affordably.
As a matter of fact in Europe during much of the Middle Ages an unofficial dress
code was in place that prevented “commoners” from wearing the same clothes as
royalty, and the wealthy land owning class. So the commoners were allowed to
make it during some periods of history but people weren't allowed to wear lace.
Folks today who are into
lace have a lot to appreciate once they look back and understand the story of
this amazing textile product. They can appreciate how affordable it is, they
can appreciate the high level of quality in today’s affordable pieces they
could bring home. And also they can appreciate that they don't have a landlord
telling them they can't wear it.
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