. . . . "0.89719998836517333984"^^ . . . . . "0.75269997119903564453"^^ . "Linen, embroidered with silk in back, cross, satin and rococo stitch, with cutwork and hollie stitch, and with knots."@en . . . . . "Linen sampler by Hannah Haynes, embroidered with silk; English; second quarter 18th century."@en . "T.22-1944" . . "0.36599999666213989258"^^ . . . . "0.81519997119903564453"^^ . . "Linen sampler by Hannah Haynes, embroidered with silk; English; second quarter 18th century."@en . . . "Linen, embroidered with silk in back, cross, satin and rococo stitch, with cutwork and hollie stitch, and with knots."@en . . . . . "0.35109999775886535645"^^ . . . . . . . . "1725 / 1750, England" . "1725 / 1750, England" . "In England and elsewhere in Europe in the 17th century, samplers had developed from personal reference works for embroiderers into a method of instruction and practice for girls learning needlework. The central area of this sampler was worked in a needle lace stitch called hollie point, most examples of which date from the second quarter of the 18th century. Hollie point was a practical stitch to learn, used particularly for decorative insertions into baby clothes and occasionally adult garments, and exact counterparts of the patterns worked in hollie-point samplers can be found in surviving clothing.\n\nThe embroidery is worked with silk in back, cross, satin and rococo stitch, with cutwork and hollie stitch, and with knots."@en . . . . . "In England and elsewhere in Europe in the 17th century, samplers had developed from personal reference works for embroiderers into a method of instruction and practice for girls learning needlework. The central area of this sampler was worked in a needle lace stitch called hollie point, most examples of which date from the second quarter of the 18th century. Hollie point was a practical stitch to learn, used particularly for decorative insertions into baby clothes and occasionally adult garments, and exact counterparts of the patterns worked in hollie-point samplers can be found in surviving clothing.\n\nThe embroidery is worked with silk in back, cross, satin and rococo stitch, with cutwork and hollie stitch, and with knots."@en . . .