Las! qui venoient de l'Isle et de Bruxelles."
—Consolation des Dames. 1620.
The fabrics of Lille and Arras are identical; both make white lace with single grounds (fond simple); but the productions of Lille are far superior to those of Arras in quality. The manufacture of the capital of French Flanders vies with those of the Netherlands in antiquity. As early as 1582 its lace-makers are described, at the entry of the Duke of Anjou into the city, "as wearing a special costume. A gown of striped stuff, with a cap of fine linen plaited in small flutes." A silver medal suspended from the neck by a black ribbon completed a dress which has descended to the nineteenth century.[[630]] The peace of Aix-la-Chapelle having transferred Lille to France, many of its artizans retired to Ghent; they are described at that period as making both white and black lace.[[631]] The art, however, did not die out, for in 1713,[[632]] on the marriage of the Governor, young Boufflers, to Mademoiselle de Villeroi, the magistrates of Lille presented him with lace to the value of 4,000 livres.[[633]]
Fig. 109.
Lille.
The beauty of the Lille lace is its ground, called "Point de Lille," or fond clair, "the finest, lightest, most transparent, and best made of all grounds."[[634]] The work is simple, consisting of the ground, with a thick thread to mark the pattern[[635]] (Fig. 109). Instead of the sides of the mesh being plaited, as in Valenciennes, or partly plaited, partly twisted, as in Brussels and Mechlin, four of the sides are formed by twisting two threads round each other, and the remaining two sides by simple crossing of the threads over each other. In the eighteenth century more than two-thirds of the lace-making population of Europe made it under the name of mignonettes and blondes de fil.
The "treille"[[636]] was finer in the last century; but in 1803 the price of thread having risen 30 per cent.,[[637]] the lace-makers, unwilling to raise the prices of their lace, adopted a larger treille, in order to diminish the quantity of thread required.
The straight edge and stiff pattern of the old Lille lace is well known (Fig. 110).
The laces of Lille, both black and white, have been much used in France: though Madame Junot speaks disparagingly of the fabric,[[638]] the light clear ground rendered them especially adapted for summer wear.