Tassel
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A tassel is a binding of plaited or otherwise gathered threads from which at one end protrudes a cord on which the tassel is hung, and which may have loose, dangling threads at the other end. Tassels are normally decorative elements, and as such one often finds them attached, usually along the bottom hem, to garments, curtains, nipples or other hangings.
The word 'tassel' comes from the Latin "tassau" which meant a clasp (as for the neck of a garment). Tassels, or liripipes, are also found on mortarboards during graduation ceremonies and possibly upon the shoes of the men at graduation. The tassel is a universal ornament is seen in varying versions in every culture around the globe.
Near the conclusion of the graduation ceremony the tassel that hangs from the graduate's mortarboard is moved from the right to the left. Typically the entire graduating class does this in unison.
[edit] Passementerie
In this craft a tassel is primarily an ornament, and was, of course, at first the casual termination of a cord to prevent unraveling as its ends which were tied in knots with the remainder of the cord hanging as shreds of it. As time went on, various peoples developed greater or lesser variations of this, until by the time of sixteenth century France, there was constituted the first Guild of Passementiers who formulated and documented the art of passementerie (pronounced: pahs/mahn/TREE). This art form had the tassel as its primary expression, but also included fringes (applied, as opposed to integral), ornamental cords, galloons, pompons, rosettes, and gimps as other forms. Tassels, pompons, and rosettes are point ornaments; the others are linear ornaments. The parts of a tassel are basically, from top to bottom:
- Its suspending cord
- Its body, which is usually made up of one or more moulds
- A skirt of fringe or other ornaments.
The techniques of construction are too elaborate to list here, but there have been a few good books on the subject in French and a few in German. No significant writings on the art from have been in English to date, though a number of minor works have appeared recently about tassels due to the resurgence in interest since around 1980.
Tassels were originally, in the Western World, a series of windings of thread or string around a suspending string until the desired curvature was attained. Decades later, the form was of turned wooden moulds which were either covered in simple wrappings or much more elaborate coverings called "satinings." This last technique involved an intricate binding of bands of filament silk vertically around the mould by means of an internal 'lacing' in the bore of the mould. These constructions were varied and augmented with extensive ornamentations that were each assigned an idiosyncratic term by their French practitioners. Those practitioners were called in France "Passementiers" (pronounced: pahs/mahn/TIERS), and an apprenticeship of seven years was required to become a master in one of the subdivisions of the guild. The French widely exported their very artistic work, and at such low prices that no other nation developed to mature a "Trimmings" industry as it is called in English. Each era of decor found tassels and their associated forms to be in different stylings suitable to the period, from the small and casual of Renaissance designs, through the medium sizes and more staid designs of the Empire period, and to the Victorian Era with the largest and most elaborate to be seen. Some of these designs are returning today from the European and American artisans who may charge a thousand dollars for a single hand-made tassel. Machine made work, mostly from developing Asian nations produce similar product at a much reduced price.
[edit] References
- Guide to Passementerie. Scalamandre Silks. New York.
- Boudet, Pierre and Bernard Gomon.. La Passementerie. Dessain et Tolra: 1981. ISBN 978-2249251085.
- Pegler, Martin. The Dictionary of Interior Design. Fairchild Publications: 1983. ASIN B0006ECV48.de:Quaste
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