"Veil of plain woven white silk fabric, with patterns in pierced work and white paste. The middle is painted with rows of small sprigs and two corner devices. There is a border all round of a continuous wavy and leafy stem and cable ornament on a circular lace-like mesh."@en . "This delicate fabric is known as pierced work from the technique with which it is decorated.\n\nAccessories made using the technique became fashionable during the late eighteenth century. Fine fabric, either linen or silk, was stiffened by starch so the threads would stick together. Then the fabric was punched using fine rounded metal teeth to push the threads aside rather than severing them, creating a lace-like pattern. \n\nExamples of pierced work can be seen in waistcoats of the 1780s and 1790s, such as: 835-1907, in the V&A collection.\nLarger examples of pierced work such as this veil: T.314-1920, and apron: T.313-1920 are included in the V&A Textile and Fashion collection."@en . "F, 1770-1790, British; white silk, painted and punched in imitation of whitework and lace"@en . . "2021-02-10T00:00:00"^^ . .