Shuttle or tatting lace and a shuttle

Object/Artifact

-

Waterperry Museum

Name/Title

Shuttle or tatting lace and a shuttle

Description

Two examples of shuttle lace or tatting and a bone shuttle. The shuttle has two elliptical bone sides with a central core. The two sides are held together with metal pins. The thread is wound round the space between the two bone sides.

Context

Tatting or shuttle lace uses a series of loops and knots to make a particularly durable type of lace. The thread is wound around the shuttle and is is then used to create a series of cow hitch or larks head hitch knots known as a ‘double stitch’. Similar types of lace can be traced back to Egypt and China and it may have developed from the art of knotting fisherman's nets. Knotting became the craft of upper class ladies in the 18th century and may have been the precursor of tatting which became popular in the 19th century.

Category

Clothing, Domestic, Occupation

Dimensions

Dimension Description

Shuttle

Width

150 mm

Length

9 mm

Weight

4 g

Dimension Notes

The lace collar measure 385 mm and is 85 mm wide.

Material

Cotton, Bone

Location

* Untyped Location

c91