double one. It is not unlikely that this damask was, in the first instance, ordered from Italy, if not by our Edward IV, at least by one of the Yorkist party after the Lancastrian defeat at Mortimer's Cross: the crown with its fringe of clouds seems to point to the curious appearance in the heavens that day. When once his loom was geared the Lombard weaver would not hesitate to work off stuffs after the same pattern ordered by his English customer and sell them in the Italian markets.
8331.
Piece of Lace in Open Work. The pattern, oblong and octagonal spaces framed in gold thread, and containing stars in silver and flowers in gold, upon a black silk ground. Milanese, end of the 16th century. 14-1/4 inches by 4-1/2 inches.
During a long time Milan, the capital of rich and manufacturing
Lombardy, stood conspicuous among its neighbouring cities for the
production of its gold thread, and beautifully wrought laces in that
material; and the specimen before us is a pleasing example of this far-famed
Milanese handicraft. To all appearance, it once served as the
apparel to an amice to be used in religious services for the dead. It
seems the work of the loom; and the piece of stout black silk under it
was meant, though quite apart from it, to be, as it were, a grounding
to throw up more effectively its gold and silver ornamentation.
8332.
Piece of Silk, formerly crimson, but much faded, with elaborate pattern of pomegranates, crowns and wreaths of flowers. Flemish, middle of the 16th century. 19 inches by 17-1/2 inches.
In this piece, though so faded, we have a good specimen of the
Bruges loom about the second half of the 16th century, and seemingly
from the same workshop which sent forth No. 8318.