Misplaced Pages

Cogne lace

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Type of bobbin lace from Cogne, Italy

Cogne lace (French: dentelles de Cogne) is a handmade bobbin lace that is made in Cogne, in the Aosta Valley in Italy. It takes the form of strips of lace, due to the manner in which it is made on a drum.

History

The tradition of Cogne lace began with the flight of the Benedictine sisters from the Cluny Abbey to the Aosta Valley in 1665. They found refuge at Saint-Nicolas and first taught bobbin lacemaking in the area, though the diffusion of their teaching was not wide. Notebooks chronicling life in Cogne, written by inhabitants some decades after the events described, document the arrival of lacemaking in the mid-1800s. However, local lacemakers had different recollections. Physical evidence in the form of similar lace-making horses indicate that the lace was introduced from great lace centers in France and Flanders via the neighboring Alpine regions. It was used by the women of Cogne to decorate their traditional black and white dress, with a black lace head kerchief and a white lace collar.

Cogne lacemakers at work
A bobbin lacemaker using the pillow horse

Equipment

Work with bobbins

Cogne lace is handmade on a base or horse called a "cavalot", made of wood decoratively carved with rosettes or flower symbols. It may include the monogram of Christ, the year it was made, and the name of its first owner. The base supports the coessein (patois cognein for "pillow", cf. French coussin), a wide cylinder stuffed with straw or wool. Generally a male relative or fiancé made the pillow horse, which have a drawer to hold thread, pins, and bobbins.

The bobbins are made of hard wood, such as apple, pear, cherry, walnut and ash, trees all found in the Alps. The lower potions of the bobbins, used as handles, are round.

Lace Designs

Cogne lace is characterized by being made without any pattern, rather it is made in an entirely mnemonic way, and uses the design on the fabric, usually checks but sometimes stripes, covering the "coessein". It is categorized as freehand lace. It produces bands that are only a few centimeters wide, up to a maximum of 7–8 cm (approximately 3 inches). The patterned fabric allows the lacemaker to keep her selvages straight, using large pins.

Today

La Mèison di pitz, heritage museum, located in rue Docteur César-Emmanuel Grappein, in Cogne

The Mèison di pitz (Lace House, in patois cognein) is the permanent museum housing Cogne lace.

See also

References

  1. Snodgrass, Mary Ellen (2017). World Clothing and Fashion : An encyclopedia of history, culture, and social influence. New York: Routledge. p. 356. ISBN 978-1-138-03990-2. OCLC 1008977171.
  2. "Les dentelles de Cogne - Coopérative " Les Dentellières " | Vallée d'Aoste". www.lovevda.it (in French). Retrieved 2023-01-16.
  3. ^ Boccazzi-Varotto, Attilio (1990). Dentelles de Cogne (in Italian and French). Priuli & Verlucca.
  4. Maroni, G.C. (2001). "Lace from My Valley". Textile Technology Digest. 58: 24.
  5. Tutton, Alfred Edwin Howard (1927). The Natural History of Ice and Snow. London: K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & Company Limited. p. 267.
  6. Ricci, Elisa (1913). Old Italian Lace. Vol. 2. London: W. Heinemann. p. 15.

External links

Bibliography

  • Attilio Boccazzi Varotto, Dentelles de Cogne, éd. Priuli & Verlucca, 1996.
Lace types
Needle lace
Embroidery
Buratto
Filet lace
Limerick
Needlerun net
Reticella
Tambour
Cutwork
Broderie anglaise
Carrickmacross
Lefkara lace
Saba lace
Bobbin lace
Mesh grounds
Antwerp
Arras
Bayeux
Beeralu
Beveren
Binche
Blonde
Bucks point
Chantilly
Chefoo
Cogne
Flanders
Freehand
Lille
Ipswich
Mechlin
Mundillo
Paris
Valenciennes
's Gravenmoer
Torchon
Tønder
Guipure
Bedfordshire
Cluny
Dentelle du Puy
Genoese
Liptov
Maltese
Yak lace
Part laces
Bruges
Brussels
Point d'Angleterre
Honiton
Rosaline
Tape
Cantù
Hinojosa
Idrija
Milanese
Peasant
Russian
Schneeberg
Three Pair Flanders
Tape lace
Crocheted lace
Machine-made lace
Other handmade laces
Media related to Lace at Wikimedia Commons Fashion portal icon Clothing portal
Categories: