Plate [78] has four specimens of eighteenth-century Dutch linen lace made for caps; it is called Gouda lace; the fillings are very well done.

In the Manila fibre lace, Plate [79], No. 1, the ground is entirely worked over by the needle into small squares, giving the appearance of network. This is done in the same way as the earlier tela tirata, the threads drawn together and sewn with wonderful regularity, without any thread being cut.

The two specimens of needle-point, Plate [79], Nos. 2 and 3, made entirely of human hair, are rather difficult to render in a photograph. They are evidently copied from Venetian patterns, and the various shades of hair used have a very pretty effect, while the execution of such fine work in so fragile a material must have demanded extreme skill and deftness of hand. They were made about 1800, at the Bar Convent, York.

A very interesting piece of old English needle-point work is No. [80], a cap of Holy, or Hollie, work. A close réseau is worked by using a stitch very similar to buttonhole stitch, and the effect is of a texture very like the cambric it adorns. The pattern is made by missing stitches, forming small holes.

Hollie lace was chiefly used to decorate infants' caps, etc., for baptism, and the pot with flower, reminiscent of the Annunciation, the Holy Dove, etc., were devices frequently introduced into the patterns. Collars of this work are mentioned in Queen Mary Stuart's inventories.

Number 2, Plate [80], is a specimen of Limerick run lace.

Three pieces of Irish needle-lace, Nos. 1 and 2 of Plate [81], are praiseworthy as very early specimens of this industry. The designs are nondescript, but many of the stitches are well executed. A bobbin-made tape is introduced in No. 1. No. 3 is the so-called Carrickmacross lace; a muslin and machine net foundation is neatly outlined by fine whipped stitches; and buttonhole-stitch brides picotées are used to join the patterns after the background is cut away. This lace was first made after the famine of 1846.

[BOBBIN-MADE LACE]

The earliest bobbin lace was made by using the same threads for the whole of the lace, thus, when the pattern had been pricked out and the requisite number of bobbins charged with thread, the plaiting and twisting the threads into lace was begun.