Showing 1052 items
matching crocheting
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Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Clothing - Nightdress
White cotton Nightdress with short sleeves. White crochet lace in six rows forming pattern at neck. Lace inset in sleeves and on edging.costume, female nightwear -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Clothing - Apron
White patterned damask apron with bib and pocket trimmed in hand made crochet . Buttoned at back with loop for extension. Bib has no straps.costume, female working -
Kew Historical Society Inc
Textile - Household Textile, Doily, 1940 - 1955
The Fashion & Textiles collections of Kew Historical Society include a number of art or household textiles manufactured or created in the United Kingdom as well as in Australia. As other cultures opened to Australian travellers in the 20th century, members began collecting and donating textiles produced in a number of other countries.White circular embroidered doily with crocheted lace edging. Three violet pansies with white leaves. Possible Semco kit. Punctured holes. household textiles, doilys -
Mont De Lancey
Textile - Doily
Small square cotton embroidered doily with brown, green, blue, pink, white and navy cross stitch pattern. Crocheted scalloped edging.doilies -
Hymettus Cottage & Garden Ballarat
gloves, crocheted gloves
pair of crocheted dress gloves made by 'Tess' Theresa Taafe (Lazarus) daughter of Mr Patrick Taafe of Redesdale.cotton, crocheted, dress gloves, tess lazarus, patrick taafe, redesdale. -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Clothing - Childs Cape, 1900-1910
Cream silk child's cape. Hand-crocheted lace edging around side and bottom edges. Hand-crocheted lace insert between two sections of pintucking, edged with embroidery. Main body of cape gathered onto plain yoke. Silk binding around neck. Garment Measures: Width at yoke: 30, Width at hem: 215, H: 50 -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Domestic Object - MERLE HOULDEN COLLECTION: MILK JUG COVER, 1930's-40's-50's
Small circular milk jug cover. Centre panel, seven cms in diameter is made from a double layer of very fine white net. A three cm band of very fine crochet surrounds the net. This fine crochet has twenty five round, green glass beads attached by a fine chain stitch passing through each bead.Made by Merle's Grandmother Geuerdomestic equipment, food storage & preservation, milk jug cover -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Clothing - MAGGIE BARBER COLLECTION: LINEN HANDKERCHIEF WITH CROCHET EDGE, 1800's
Clothing. A square of very fine linen, 12 cms diameter, surrounded by a one cm edging of drawn threadwork, and 9.5 cm of fine crochet. Crochet has circular shaped motifs, some very lacy and open, with a band of more closely worked pattern on either side of the open motifs. A looped pattern with picot finish edges the handkerchief.costume accessories, female, linen handkerchief with crochet edge. -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Clothing - GERMAN HERITAGE SOCIETY COLLECTION: CAP - GENTLEMAN'S SMOKING CAP
Item 15. Black Gentleman's Smoking Cap with stitched green leaves and blue flowers around the top and sides. The top of the crown has a pale blue crocheted dome 3.7cm wide and 18mm high. From under the dome is a plaited crochet thread which ends in a long tassel. The inside is pale blue quilted stitching in a leaf pattern.bendigo, clubs, bendigo heritage, german heritage society collection - cap - gentleman's smoking cap -
Orbost & District Historical Society
apron, first half 20th century
This item is an example of a handcrafted item and reflects the needlework skills of women in the first half of the 20th century.A large hand-embroidered calico apron. Picture on front is of a lady picking flowers. Has a pocket on the right hand side. There is a green crocheted border.apron costume-accessories handcrafts needlework -
Blacksmith's Cottage and Forge
Gloves -childrens
The gloves were worn by donor as a child in Sunshine to wear to Sunday school in the 1940s.Local history, accessories worn by children in the 1940s.One pair of ecru coloured cotton gloves. Crocheted around cuff, gathering to form cuff-picot edge. Diamond pattern motif on front.Label: all cotton. Made in Italy exclusively for Grenoble gloves- Melbourne M.cotton, accessories, gloves, crocheted -
Blacksmith's Cottage and Forge
Gloves-childrens, Circa 1940s
Used by the donor as a child in Sunshine during the 1940s, to wear to Sunday school.Local history, typical of childrens accessories worn in the 1940s.One pair of ecru coloured, crocheted with a varying pattern down the back of the gloves, finishing with a cuff of triangular "shell" motif. Stretchy nylon fabric.cotton, accessories, gloves, crocheted -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Doily, Gladys Angus, wife of Dr. W.R. Angus, mid 1900's
This doily was donated to Flagstaff Hill Maritime Village by the family of Doctor William Roy Angus, Surgeon and Oculist. It is part of the “W.R. Angus Collection” that includes historical medical equipment, surgical instruments and material once belonging to Dr Edward Ryan and Dr Thomas Francis Ryan, (both of Nhill, Victoria) as well as Dr Angus’ own belongings. The Collection’s history spans the medical practices of the two Doctors Ryan, from 1885-1926 plus that of Dr Angus, up until 1969. ABOUT THE “W.R.ANGUS COLLECTION” Doctor William Roy Angus M.B., B.S., Adel., 1923, F.R.C.S. Edin.,1928 (also known as Dr Roy Angus) was born in Murrumbeena, Victoria in 1901 and lived until 1970. He qualified as a doctor in 1923 at University of Adelaide, was Resident Medical Officer at the Royal Adelaide Hospital in 1924 and for a period was house surgeon to Sir (then Mr.) Henry Simpson Newland. Dr Angus was briefly an Assistant to Dr Riddell of Kapunda, then commenced private practice at Curramulka, Yorke Peninsula, SA, where he was physician, surgeon and chemist. In 1926, he was appointed as new Medical Assistant to Dr Thomas Francis Ryan (T.F. Ryan, or Tom), in Nhill, Victoria, where his experiences included radiology and pharmacy. In 1927 he was Acting House Surgeon in Dr Tom Ryan’s absence. Dr Angus had become engaged to Gladys Forsyth and they decided he further his studies overseas in the UK in 1927. He studied at London University College Hospital and at Edinburgh Royal Infirmary and in 1928, was awarded FRCS (Fellow from the Royal College of Surgeons), Edinburgh. He worked his passage back to Australia as a Ship’s Surgeon on the on the Australian Commonwealth Line’s T.S.S. Largs Bay. Dr Angus married Gladys in 1929, in Ballarat. (They went on to have one son (Graham 1932, born in SA) and two daughters (Helen (died 12/07/1996) and Berenice (Berry), both born at Mira, Nhill ) According to Berry, her mother Gladys made a lot of their clothes. She was very talented and did some lovely embroidery including lingerie for her trousseau and beautifully handmade baby clothes. Dr Angus was a ‘flying doctor’ for the A.I.M. (Australian Inland Ministry) Aerial Medical Service in 1928 . Its first station was in the remote town of Oodnadatta, where Dr Angus was stationed. He was locum tenens there on North-South Railway at 21 Mile Camp. He took up this ‘flying doctor’ position in response to a call from Dr John Flynn; the organisation was later known as the Flying Doctor Service, then the Royal Flying Doctor Service. A lot of his work during this time involved dental surgery also. Between 1928-1932 he was surgeon at the Curramulka Hospital, Yorke Peninsula, South Australia. In 1933 Dr Angus returned to Nhill and purchased a share of the Nelson Street practice and Mira hospital (a 2 bed ward at the Nelson Street Practice) from Dr Les Middleton one of the Middleton Brothers, the current owners of what previously once Dr Tom Ryan’s practice. Dr Tom and his brother had worked as surgeons included eye surgery. Dr Tom Ryan performed many of his operations in the Mira private hospital on his premises. He had been House Surgeon at the Nhill Hospital 1902-1926. Dr Tom Ryan had one of the only two pieces of radiology equipment in Victoria during his practicing years – The Royal Melbourne Hospital had the other one. Over the years Dr Tom Ryan had gradually set up what was effectively a training school for country general-practitioner-surgeons. Each patient was carefully examined, including using the X-ray machine, and any surgery was discussed and planned with Dr Ryan’s assistants several days in advance. Dr Angus gained experience in using the X-ray machine there during his time as assistant to Dr Ryan. When Dr Angus bought into the Nelson Street premises in Nhill he was also appointed as the Nhill Hospital’s Honorary House Surgeon 1933-1938. His practitioner’s plate from his Nhill surgery is now mounted on the doorway to the Port Medical Office at Flagstaff Hill Maritime Village, Warrnambool. When Dr Angus took up practice in the Dr Edward and Dr Tom Ryan’s old premises he obtained their extensive collection of historical medical equipment and materials spanning 1884-1926. A large part of this collection is now on display at the Port Medical Office at Flagstaff Hill Maritime Village in Warrnambool. In 1939 Dr Angus and his family moved to Warrnambool where he purchased “Birchwood,” the 1852 home and medical practice of Dr John Hunter Henderson, at 214 Koroit Street. (This property was sold in1965 to the State Government and is now the site of the Warrnambool Police Station. and an ALDI sore is on the land that was once their tennis court). The Angus family was able to afford gardeners, cooks and maids; their home was a popular place for visiting dignitaries to stay whilst visiting Warrnambool. Dr Angus had his own silk worm farm at home in a Mulberry tree. His young daughter used his centrifuge for spinning the silk. Dr Angus was appointed on a part-time basis as Port Medical Officer (Health Officer) in Warrnambool and held this position until the 1940’s when the government no longer required the service of a Port Medical Officer in Warrnambool; he was thus Warrnambool’s last serving Port Medical Officer. (Masters of immigrant ships arriving in port reported incidents of diseases, illness and death and the Port Medical Officer made a decision on whether the ship required Quarantine and for how long, in this way preventing contagious illness from spreading from new immigrants to the residents already in the colony.) Dr Angus was a member of the Australian Medical Association, for 35 years and surgeon at the Warrnambool Base Hospital 1939-1942, He served as a Surgeon Captain during WWII1942-45, in Ballarat, Victoria, and in Bonegilla, N.S.W., completing his service just before the end of the war due to suffering from a heart attack. During his convalescence he carved an intricate and ‘most artistic’ chess set from the material that dentures were made from. He then studied ophthalmology at the Royal Melbourne Eye and Ear Hospital and created cosmetically superior artificial eyes by pioneering using the intrascleral cartilage. Angus received accolades from the Ophthalmological Society of Australasia for this work. He returned to Warrnambool to commence practice as an ophthalmologist, pioneering in artificial eye improvements. He was Honorary Consultant Ophthalmologist to Warrnambool Base Hospital for 31 years. He made monthly visits to Portland as a visiting surgeon, to perform eye surgery. He represented the Victorian South-West subdivision of the Australian Medical Association as its secretary between 1949 and 1956 and as chairman from 1956 to 1958. In 1968 Dr Angus was elected member of Spain’s Barraquer Institute of Barcelona after his research work in Intrasclearal cartilage grafting, becoming one of the few Australian ophthalmologists to receive this honour, and in the following year presented his final paper on Living Intrasclearal Cartilage Implants at the Inaugural Meeting of the Australian College of Ophthalmologists in Melbourne In his personal life Dr Angus was a Presbyterian and treated Sunday as a Sabbath, a day of rest. He would visit 3 or 4 country patients on a Sunday, taking his children along ‘for the ride’ and to visit with him. Sunday evenings he would play the pianola and sing Scottish songs to his family. One of Dr Angus’ patients was Margaret MacKenzie, author of a book on local shipwrecks that she’d seen as an eye witness from the late 1880’s in Peterborough, Victoria. In the early 1950’s Dr Angus, painted a picture of a shipwreck for the cover jacket of Margaret’s book, Shipwrecks and More Shipwrecks. She was blind in later life and her daughter wrote the actual book for her. Dr Angus and his wife Gladys were very involved in Warrnambool’s society with a strong interest in civic affairs. He had an interest in people and the community They were both involved in the creation of Flagstaff Hill, including the layout of the gardens. After his death (28th March 1970) his family requested his practitioner’s plate, medical instruments and some personal belongings be displayed in the Port Medical Office surgery at Flagstaff Hill Maritime Village, and be called the “W. R. Angus Collection”. The W.R. Angus Collection is significant for still being located at the site it is connected with, Doctor Angus being the last Port Medical Officer in Warrnambool. The collection of medical instruments and other equipment is culturally significant, being an historical example of medicine from late 19th to mid-20th century. Dr Angus assisted Dr Tom Ryan, a pioneer in the use of X-rays and in ocular surgery. Doily, from the W.R. Angus collection. Coffee coloured doily, hand tatted. Centre has snowflake design. Hand crocheted by Glenys Angus. flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked coast, flagstaff hill maritime museum, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, flagstaff hill maritime village, great ocean road, dr w r angus, gladys angus, doiley, handmade doily, handmade linen -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Accessory - crocheted purse, Purse
Made by Josef "Walter" Thiele, a Dunera boy. Made as a gift for his wife in the U.K.Crocheted purse (handbag) with thin handle attached across the top. Originally blue in colour but faded to grey in front. Navy blue toggle as a clasp.dunera boys, hans kronberger, josef thiele, internment camp handcrafts, alan parkinson -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Clothing - Costume and Accessories, c1930
Cream Lawn Nightgown Crochet Round neck and sleeves. White silk embroidery on yoke & sleeves. Ribbon tie at waist . Mrs P Blight.stawell clothing material -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Textile - Doiley
Belonged to donor's late husband's grandmotherDoiley 29cm x 15cm colour ecru. Fillet Crochet. Two dogs facing each other in the center and block design around edge.handcrafts, crocheting or crochet work -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Textile - Table Runner
Long white cotton table runner with cotton crochet edging and two lines of drawthread work - one in centre and one around four sidesmanchester, table linen -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Clothing - Baby's Dress
Cream fuji silk baby's dress. Crochet scalloped neckline, short sleeves . Neckline and sleeves embroidered in cream silk 2 press studscostume, infants' -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Clothing - Camisole
White cotton sleeveless camisole with white cotton crochet trim around neck and armhole edge. Two buttons and tape ties at neck and waist.costume, female underwear -
Rutherglen Historical Society
ANZAC Memorabilia, 25/04/2015
Display was constructed by the Rutherglen Historical Society for the 100th anniversary of ANZAC Day. Each poppy represents one soldier. Those who returned and are buried at the local cemetery are shown at the top. The remainder represent those from the district who died overseas during the War.Wire mesh panel with an arrangement of knitted and crocheted poppies, each with a name attached, to commemorate World War 1 soldiers from the Rutherglen district.At top of display: "ANZACs at Rest in Carlyle Cemetery" Below the third row of poppies: "They didn't Come Home"world war !, world war i, anzac, memorials, poppies -
Tatura Irrigation & Wartime Camps Museum
Accessory - Evening Bag
The evening bag belonged to Miss Love who bequeathed it to Catherine Primrose Mary Mactier (nee Wilson). Miss Love died in 1950 aged 88 years.Crocheted lime green with a white metal clasp and chain. Embroidered with white metal beads in a circular pattern front and back, Beading on lower edge. -
Mont De Lancey
Container - Milk jug
From the home of Mrs. Nell Sebire, second wife of Thomas.White china small milk jug with Kookaburra and leaf design on sides. Also crocheted milk jug cover with green beads around edge.milk jugs, food covers -
Mont De Lancey
Hand towel, Early 1900's
Guest towels belonging to Valmae (Colling) Gaudion's, Grandmother, Alice Maud (McDonald) Brooks who passed away in 1956 aged 83.Three embroidered hand towels. White cotton with floral design on one end. Edged with mauve crochet with floral embroidery. One edge scalloped.hand towels -
Mont De Lancey
Doily, 1930
3 cotton thread crocheted doilies. One pair white, star-shaped with pineapple pattern. One cream-coloured, with central whirlygig pattern.doilies, table linen. -
Mont De Lancey
Doily
Circular, cream-coloured, linen doily, with two embroidered plants on opposite sides, surrounded by a blue and yellow scalloped stitching line and crocheted edging.doilies, table linen. -
National Wool Museum
Book, Handy Hints
"Handy Hints and knitting/crochet ideas as featured in 'Barbara's Wool News' 1983-1988" - Australian Wool Corporation, 1988.handicrafts knitting crochet, australian wool corporation, laundering, handicrafts, knitting, crochet -
Vision Australia
Photograph - Image, Laurie Levy, Elderly man with crocheted shawl and knitted cap
An unnamed man, wearing a crochet shawl and knitted cap, sits in a chair with his head low to the pillow in front of him.2 b/w photographs of unknown manassociation for the blind, elanora home (brighton) -
Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists (RANZCOG)
Blunt hook
Most likely collected and donated by Dr Frank Forster. Label attached indicates the item has been viewed by Bryan Hibbard and attributed as a Barnes type of blunt hook.Blunt hook, with metal handle, interchangeable, the handle unscrews. Most likely had crochet also. Meyer Meltzer London stamped on handle. See Mayer & Meltzer catalogue, 1890. Fig. 5976, page 336. This illustrates the hook and crochet, interchangable with the one handle- a mahogany handle with cross hatch pattern. Registration 338, with metal handle, a much later model.obstetric delivery, blunt hook, destructive instrument -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Costume - Baby's Bonnet, n.d
Baby's bonnet, hand crocheted, very fine thread silk, cotton, with a sheen, ecru. Intricate pattern, picot edge, figured satin ribbon ties -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Decorative object - Doily, n.d
Doily, oval, white cotton, white hand crocheted border. Embroidered with red, white and blue flowers, stitched in lazy-daisy stitch and green leaves.