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Lacemaking in Ireland – By the Poor For the Rich


Lacemaking in Ireland – By the Poor For the Rich - Lace in Context

The making of lace in Ireland is a domestic industry, practiced by some hundreds of peasants in their homes, by communities in convents, by children in ...

By the Poor For the Rich: Lace in Context – Lace and lacemaking in ...

Vital to the local economy of many regions across the continent, lace was a unique commercial product which connected wealthy consumers and patrons to a largely ...

From Rags to Riches to Revolution: A Social History of 19th Irish Lace

paradox: the vast economic and social crisis that created the Irish lace industry – the poverty of its makers – stands in direct opposition to the wealth of ...

Irish Lace | ReadTheory

In the beginning, its production was nothing more than a cottage industry. In the 1800s Ireland was a land divided between the rich and the poor. Many families ...

Irish lace - Wikipedia

Irish lace has always been an important part of the Irish needlework tradition. Both needlepoint and bobbin laces were made in Ireland before the middle of ...

Irish Lace and Women's Independence - Fiona Harrington

Most households depended on the little money they earned from agriculture and it was a time of great financial hardship. When the wife of the ...

Lace-making during the Famine Melissa Fegan No. 86 in Fintan O ...

reports about their successes in teaching needlework to poor Irish women. ... Her plan is to 'get quite rich' herself, while 'the poor children will be earning a.

Sense Of Lace : Dublin : Destination Experiences

Clare, also known as the Poor Clare Sisters, moved to Kenmare, Ireland, to start a lacemaking school to teach needlepoint to the city's women and girls ...

(Re-)Making Irish Lace - Castellani Art Museum

Numerous convents, philanthropic societies, and wealthy patrons promoted widespread instruction in lacemaking, hoping to create a means for poor ...

Th e st ory ofIr ish lace is a st ory o - The Heritage Council

Lace-making schools sprang up all over Ireland, established by two quite different types of women. The first were wealthy Protestant female philanthropists, who ...

Lace Exhibition - Nano Nagle Place

The lace made in this fashion was traditionally a signifier of wealth and status in Europe, and it contributed significantly to the Irish economy during times ...

Irish Lace & the Work-from-Home Women Who Made It - Shanore

The exquisitely detailed lacemaking styles of Ireland have their roots in the Great Hunger, aka the Potato Famine. While Irish women first began ...

Irish Lace Making History: Unravelling the Threads of a Time ...

Often characterised as a luxury commodity, Irish lace began as a form of economic relief, helping numerous families combat poverty, especially ...

Lacemaking | Ulster Folk Museum

Whilst many of the women who made the work were never wealthy enough to wear it themselves, their skills and artistry live on in examples of Irish lace in ...

Kenmare Lace - The Ring of Kerry

Like many other parts of Ireland ... In the 1850's while the famine had abated the poverty remained and it was this poverty that brought the Poor Clare nuns and ...

Lace curtain and shanty Irish - Wikipedia

The "lace curtain Irish" were those who were well off, while the "shanty Irish" were the poor, who were presumed to live in shanties, or roughly built cabins.

REAL LACE: America's Irish Rich - HamiltonBook.com

How the Irish elite emerged out of poverty into positions of both social and business prominence in American history. Birmingham recounts the ultimate rags ...

Sláinte!: The Lace Place - Irish America

When famine devastated Ireland (1845-47), lace-making became a widespread cottage industry. Work was laborious, but no money was needed for ...

Introduction to Headford Lace Project Lace Archive

The wearing of lace was the preserve of the rich but it was made by the poor. Lace was an outward expression of social status and wealth. There are some ...

What's a lace-curtain Irish motherfucker? - Boston - Reddit

This is one of the reasons why "lace-curtain Irish" is such a specific term — it refers to shedding shoddy or shanty behaviour via visible ...