. History of lace. de Bourbon, sister of Henrv IV. ; the last to-Anne of Austria. The Pratique de Leguille de MilourM. MKjneral was published by the same printer, 1605 ; andwe ha^e another work, termed Bele Prerle, also printed atParis, bearing date 160L^^ The points of Italy and Flanders now first appear at -■ Satijiiqacdcla Court. I6I0. - La Fit iir (h a rations dc Lingerie^ - Hist&ire de la Merc et du Fih. ^^ Tresor des Fatrons. J. Ostans. from 1616 to 19. Amsterdam, 1729. ^^ Le Livrc de Moresques (1546), -^ Livre nouveau diet Patrons de Livre de Lingerie, Dom. de Sera Lingerie, etc. (1584)


. History of lace. de Bourbon, sister of Henrv IV. ; the last to-Anne of Austria. The Pratique de Leguille de MilourM. MKjneral was published by the same printer, 1605 ; andwe ha^e another work, termed Bele Prerle, also printed atParis, bearing date 160L^^ The points of Italy and Flanders now first appear at -■ Satijiiqacdcla Court. I6I0. - La Fit iir (h a rations dc Lingerie^ - Hist&ire de la Merc et du Fih. ^^ Tresor des Fatrons. J. Ostans. from 1616 to 19. Amsterdam, 1729. ^^ Le Livrc de Moresques (1546), -^ Livre nouveau diet Patrons de Livre de Lingerie, Dom. de Sera Lingerie, etc. (1584), and Patrons 2)0ur Brodeurs Patrons de diverses Manieres, etc. (no date), were also printed at Paris. (Title in rhyme.) The last book on this kind of work Sensuyvent les Patrons de Mesirc printed at Paris is styled, il/r^7iO<fc^o«r A)itoinc Belin. /aire des Desseins avec des Carreaux, Cc Livre est i^laisant ct utile. (Title etc., hy Pere Dominique Donat, reli- in rhvme.) »ieux carme. 1722. Plate Brussels. Flounce, Bobbin-made.—Late seventeenth, century. Given by Madame deMaintenon to Fenelon, Archbishop of Cambrai. Now in the Victoria and Albert Museum. Height, 2 ft. 2 in. To face page 146. FRANCE TO LOUIS XIV 145 €Ourt, and the Church soon adopted the prevailing taste forthe decoration of her altars and her prelates.^^ The ruff is finally discarded and replaced by the ^ colrabattu, with its deep-scalloped border of point. The manchettes a revers are trimmed in the same manner,^nd the fashion even extends to the tops of the boots. Ofthese lace-trimmed boots the favourite, Cinq-Mars, left threehundred pairs at his death, 1642. From his portrait, after Fig. 66.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectlaceand, bookyear1902