Braiding, Naalbinding & Sprang

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Braiding, Naalbinding & Sprang

Textile Weaving



More Textile Weaving pages

Completion Rating
This article's completion rating is 1 out of 5. Article planned for future work. No real progress to date.
Completion Rating
This article's completion rating is 1 out of 5. Article planned for future work. No real progress to date.

Similar to netting but constructed entirely from warp threads.

Art
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Literature
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Archaeology

  • Isle of Man, St Patrick's Isle. 'Pagan Lady', either from a head-dress or work-bag [GRAHAM-CAMPBELL 2002:p.86].
  • Ireland, Dublin. A 5" wide strip of silk sprang [EWING 2007:p.149].

Discussion
It has often been suggested that the beech frame found in the Oseberg burial could have been used to make sprang [EWING 2007:p.149]. Ewing also makes the point that most Viking Age sprang was 'probably made in linen which rarely survives in the archaeological record'.
Other possible unpublished finds:

  • Scotland, Shetland. Impression on the back of a pair of oval brooches.
  • Scotland, Perth. Textile fragment.
  • England, York. Textile fragment found in 1800's now in the Yorkshire museum. Interpreted as a leg binding and from the Roman era.



See Also

Sprang hair net

References

<nocite> EWING2007 GRAHAM-CAMPBELL2002 HAGG1986 INGSTAD1992 OWEN-CROCKER2004 WINCOTT2003 </nocite> <biblio force=false>#Template:Bib</biblio>