Museum Quality Antique Loom Lace Christening Gown | 110cm | 1880s-1910s | Collector's Piece
This is not simply a christening gown. This is a museum-quality textile artifact—a testament to the nearly-lost art of loom lace making.
Can you imagine packaging up your belongings for a journey which took months, and often many did not make it. Can you imagine the hope and the joy, to stand in this wild country with some European influence, and much Maori Heritage and conflict around.
The MOTAT pieces in New Zealand give a good background to how many of these treasures came across by sea or were hand-made over months of dedication. This piece absolutely rivals them all. A Significant Piece - One of a Treasured Collection
This is a significant piece and only one of the group. The collection includes five christening gowns of varying ages and styles, with the last piece being a small child's hand-made apron. These are absolutely beautiful and have been kept by one who knows how to keep precious fabric, now in my hands it is best to be taken to another who knows how to carefully prepare the environment.
The delight this family had is evident in every stitch, every carefully preserved piece. We found more recent hangers—perhaps 50-odd years old—with children's names written on in pen. Generations of babies wore these sacred gowns, each name a testament to continuity, faith, and family love. Exceptional Condition - Remarkably Preserved
These pieces are currently in incredibly good condition. After over a century, the loom lace remains intact, the hand-stitching is secure, and the fabric shows minimal age-appropriate wear. This level of preservation is rare and speaks to the care with which this gown was treasured through generations and across oceans. A Heritage Lost, A Legacy Found
This is one of 5 pieces from the same family, though the heritage has been lost to us at this time. What remains is the opportunity to create a new heritage—new beginnings built on the legacy of incredibly brave people who took hugely perilous journeys from England to New Zealand by ship.
The eye which saw this piece also holds a few treasures from her own heritage, taken across the seas by those same courageous souls. The Loom Lace: A Dying Art
True loom lace (also known as bobbin lace or pillow lace) was created on specialized looms using dozens of weighted bobbins. Each intricate geometric pattern required weeks—sometimes months—of meticulous work by master lace makers.
By the 1920s, machine-made lace had largely replaced this time-intensive craft. Pieces like this, with intact loom lace in excellent condition, are increasingly rare. Traditional Long Christening Gown
At 110cm (43 inches) in length with small armholes suitable for infants under 18 months, this represents the traditional Victorian/Edwardian style of christening gown. These gowns were intentionally made much longer than the baby, creating a flowing, elegant drape during the baptism ceremony. The long length symbolized the child's long life ahead and created a dramatic, sacred presentation. Provenance & History
- Era: 1880s-1910s (based on loom lace technique and construction)
- Length: 110cm (43 inches) - traditional long christening gown style
- Size: Small armholes indicate infant wear (newborn to 18 months)
- Origin: Likely European craftsmanship, brought to New Zealand by ship
- Condition: Incredibly good condition - loom lace intact, hand-stitching secure, minimal age-appropriate wear
- Construction: Hand-stitched throughout with exquisite loom lace at neckline and detailing
- Journey: Part of a collection of 5 christening gowns plus hand-made child's apron from the same family
- Evidence of use: Vintage hangers with children's names written in pen - generations of babies christened in these gowns The Sacred Significance
Someone's hands wove this lace, thread by thread, bobbin by bobbin—perhaps over months of dedicated work. Someone packed this precious gown for a perilous sea voyage from England to New Zealand. Someone's baby wore this on their most sacred day in a new land, far from home, the long gown flowing as they were held aloft for blessing.
Someone's family treasured this enough to preserve it for over a century, through journeys and generations. Someone carefully wrote their children's names on hangers, marking each sacred moment.
Now it waits for its next custod
- Store:
- Know My How
- Price:
- $4,888