Pair of mittens, England, Great Britain (embroidered) ca. 1600 - TopicsExpress



          

Pair of mittens, England, Great Britain (embroidered) ca. 1600 (made) These mittens had a decorative rather than practical function. Like many of the embroidered gloves made during this period, its purpose was to show off the wearers wealth and status. The crimson silk velvet mitten has a richly embroidered white satin gauntlet. The embroidery features silver and silver-gilt thread and purl, with couched work and coloured silks and is worked in long and short and satin stitches. Familiar flowers such as borage, pinks and lilies, as well as insects and fruits, scattered amongst the foliage, adorn the gauntlet. In the centre of each cuff and repeated back and front, is a pillar entwined with a sprouting vine. It may have been inspired by similar motifs in Geffrey Whitneys book, A Choice of Emblemes, (1586). Full of devices or emblems (images associated with moral or allegorical tales), Whitneys Choice was the first English emblem book and a great influence on design of the decorative arts during the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods. Although the precise meanings of many devices are lost today, they would have communicated from the wearer to observers in the way that badges and logos do today.
Posted on: Mon, 01 Sep 2014 06:54:24 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015