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Fig. 13.--MME VERBIEST, WEARING PILLOW-MADE LACE À RÉSEAU.
From the family group by Gonzales Coquer. Buckingham Palace. About 1664.
(By permission of Messrs Braun, Clement & Co., Dornach (Alsace), and Paris.)
Fig. 14.--PIECE OF PILLOW-MADE LACE USUALLY KNOWN AS "POINT DE FLANDRES À BRIDES."
Of the middle of the 17th century, the designs for which were often adaptations from those made for such needlepoint lace as that of the Jabot in fig. 12.
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Fig. 15.--PRINCESS MARIA TERESA STUART, WEARING A FLOUNCE OR TABLIER OF LACE SIMILAR TO THAT IN FIG. 17. Dated 1695.
From a group by Largilliere. National Portrait Gallery. (Photo by Emery Walker.)
Fig. 16.--FLOUNCE OF PILLOW-MADE LACE À RÉSEAU.
Flemish, of the middle of the 17th century. This lace is usually thought to be the earliest type of "Point d'Angleterre" in contradistinction to the "Point de Flandres" (fig. 14).
Fig. 17.--VERY DELICATE NEEDLEPOINT LACE WITH CLUSTERS OF SMALL RELIEF WORK.
Venetian, middle of the 17th century, and often called "rose-point lace," and sometimes "Point de Neige."
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