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A history of lace / by Mrs. Bury Palliser
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170

111STOKY OF LACK.

back was sold off (Fig. 83). It is pillow-made, the reseau overcast.Fart of the'equipage of the King of Home excited the admira-tion of all beholders at the exhibition of 185 ).

Alengon again fell with the first empire. -No new workerswere trained, the old ones died oil", and as it requires so manyhands to execute even the most simple lace, the manufactureagain nearly died out. In vain the Duchesse d'Angoulemeendeavoured to revive the fabric, and gave large orders herself;

Fig. 83.

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Bed made for Napoleon I.

but point lace had been replaced by blonde, and the consumptionwas so small, it was resumed on a very confined scale. So lowhad it fallen in 1830 that there were only between two andthree hundred lace-workers, whose products did not exceed thevalue of 1200 francs (18?.). Again, in 1836, Baron Mercier,thinking by producing it at a lower price to procure a morefavourable sale, set up a lace school, and caused the girls to workthe patterns on bobbin-net, as bearing some resemblance to the