This specimen of German trimming, like the one No. 8320, seems to have been made at Cologne, and for the same ecclesiastical uses.
8325.
Piece of Silk-Velvet Damask; green, with pattern of large and small pomegranates in gold. Lucca, latter half of the 15th century. 3 feet 10 inches by 11-1/2 inches.
Among the remarkable specimens of velvet in this collection, not
the least conspicuous is the present one, being velvet upon velvet, that
is, having, in a portion of it, a pattern in a higher pile than the pile of
the ground. By looking narrowly at the larger pomegranate in golden
thread within its heart-shaped oval, with featherings bounded by trefoiled
cusps, the eye will catch an undulating pattern rising slightly
above the rest of the pile; such examples, as distinguished from what
is called cut or raised velvet, are very rare. The tone, too, of the fine
green, as well as the goodness of the gold, in the ornamentation, enhance
the value of this piece, which was once the back part of a chasuble.
8326.
Piece of Silk Damask; white, with the rose and pomegranate pattern woven in gold thread. Spanish, latter half of the 15th century.
This piece, from the looms of Spain, for the beauty of design and
the thick richness of its silk, is somewhat remarkable.
8327.
Box covered with crimson raised velvet, having, round the lid, a many-coloured cotton fringe. It holds two liturgical pallæ, both of fine linen and figured—one mounted on pasteboard and measuring 7-3/4 inches by 7-1/4 inches, with an altar and two figures; the other, with the Crucifixion and St. Mary and St. John, measuring 9-1/2 inches by 9-3/4 inches. Inside the lid of this box is an illuminated border of flowers, and