Showing 1909 items
matching samples
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Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Cluny Lace, Late 19th or early 20th Century
Use: Domestic. Household trimmingBobbin lace insertion. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Cluny Lace, Late 19th or early 20th Century
Use: Domestic. Household trimmingBobbin lace insertion. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Buckinghamshire Point lace, 19th Century
Fine lace used as a costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Alencon type lace, Late 19th Century
Fine lace used as a costume trimming. A 19th Century imitation of French Alençon lace. Probably made in Burano Italy.Needle lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Filet Lace - Lacis
Use: Domestic. Household trimmingA darned lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Cluny Lace, Late 19th or early 20th Century
Use: Domestic. Household trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Alencon Lace, Mid 18th Century
Fine lace used as a costume trimmingNeedle lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Torchon lace, Late 19th or early 20th Century
Use: Domestic. Household trimming Bedfordshire type heading.Bobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Buckinghamshire Point lace, Early 20th Century
Use: Domestic. Household trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Torchon lace
Use: Domestic. Household trimming A heavy linen laceBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Le Puy Lace, Late 19th Century
A black silk lace used as a costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Le Puy Lace, Late 19th Century
A black silk edging used as a costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Valenciennes lace, Mid 19th Century
Fine lace used as costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Honiton lace, Early 18th Century
Very fine lace used for costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Alencon type lace, Early 19th century
Lace probably made in Burano Italy in the style of 18th century French Alençon needle lace. Fine lace used as costume trimmingNeedle lace edging - sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Point de France, Late 17th century
Heavy, intricate, good quality lace. Use - either fashionable costume or ecclesiastical.Needle lace flounce - sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Valenciennes lace, Early 18th Century
Very fine linen thread. Fine lace used for costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Valenciennes lace, 1st half 19th Century
Use: Fine lace used as costume trimming.Bobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Rosaline lace, Late 19th Century
Bobbin made lace with needle made flower centres. Use: Costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Flemish lace, Early 18th Century
Very fine Flemish lace possibly from Antwerp. Fine lace used for costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Blonde, Early 19th Century
A very light and delicate lace for costume trimming. Probably hand made but could be machine made.Bobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Brussels Duchesse, Late 19th Century
A Guipure lace, having a bar background. Fashion item. Costume trimmingBobbin lace edging. Sample -
Australian Lace Guild - Victorian Branch
Textile - Brussels Guipure lace, 1870-1900
Use: domestic. household trimmingBobbin lace edging. sample -
University of Melbourne, School of Chemistry
German Tinder Sample
g. Sample of German Tinder -
Melton City Libraries
Document, 'Schutt and Barrie Flour Mill envelope, Unknown
SUMMARY - Schutt & Barrie Chaff Mills Partnership West Footscray, Parwan and Diggers Rest. Mary nee Barrie Robinson (1907 –1999) writes c1980 about her father Charles Ernest Barrie of Darlingsford Melton (1871 – 1931) Extract copied from her handwritten story - My father was born in Ballarat in 1871. … commenced his working life with a team of bullocks and a chaffcutter in the St Arnaud district, a work the he became most success at and would continue in to the end of his life. He eventually became the owner of a chaff mill at Melton station with an access line to the railway. [1900] The Schutt & Barrie partnership ….Dad later became involved in a Chaff mill at West Footscray run by John Ralph Schutt who when he met Dad was a very sick man and had begged Dad to come into the business and help him. That began a very happy association, the business was put on its feet. An empty quarry across Geelong Road opposite the mill was purchased, the chaffcutters were set up in the quarry and that was the start of a very busy and prosperous period. A branch line was run into the mill. Dad spent some afternoons at the mill going by train, and spending some hours there at night, at the same time running the farm with full time help. Two full 8 horse teams were used to work the land, which meant early rising for the horses to be fed and harnessed ready for the men to commence the days work. Charlie Lowe and Murdock Davey were two of the men who worked for Dad in those years. The firm purchased a mill at Parwan and Dad spent a lot of time and energy getting it running to their satisfaction. Monday was the day he spent time there also round the district of Parwan and Balliang. He came to know many of the their names were well known in our household for many years. [1920] Later a flour mill was built beside the Chaff mill at West Footscray but it never thrived like the mill. The chaff mill had many loyal and good men employed there and there was never any trouble between men and management. Willie Walters and Miss Renyolds were some I remember, other names me, Joyce would be able to name them. [Sister of Mary born 1920] Sample envelope from the businesslocal identities -
National Wool Museum
Memorabilia - Wool sample display, 1963
Display board was once property of Port Macquarie Historical Society & Museum, but they de-accessioned it in 2016 before donating it to the National Wool Museum. Reason for de-accession was that it no longer fit with their collection aims, nor was it relevant to their location. Item appears to have been made in 1963, or at least using wool samples from 1963. Wool samples were grown by a S.F. PICKER at 'BIGGA' in New South Wales. No further information was given by donor.Light brown timber framed display board with glass cover. Light brown backing board with 25 wool samples taped to the board, each with a paper lable with printed text. Main label reads -WORLD RECORD PRICE / 1963...468d / SUPER FINE MERINO. / COUNT. 74/80. / GROWN BY. / S.F. PICKER. BIGGA. / N.S.W.-wool samples, wool sorting, wool breading -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Wood Sample, c. 1854
This piece of wood is from the American clipper ship LIGHTNING was a 3 masted, fully rigged extreme clipper ship. She was commissioned by James Baines, of the Black Ball Line in Liverpool, England, during the time of the Australian Gold Rush for the trade of passengers and cargo between England and Australia. Her cargo listed early consignments of livestock and animals, including rabbits sent to Thomas Austin of Barwon Park, Winchelsea, Victoria. The LIGHTNING was built in 1854 by shipbuilder Donald McKay, of East Boston, USA. She was described as spacious and comfortable, and one of the smartest ships known. The LIGHTNING set many speed records for her sea crossings, and became one of the most famous of the racing clippers and one of the fastest ever launched. In 1854, with Captain ‘Bully’ Forbes and Mate ‘Bully’ Bragg, LIGHTNING made the return trip from Melbourne to Liverpool in only 64 days, 3 hours and 10 minutes; a record for all time. Captain Enright became the new Master of LIGHTNING soon afterwards. He has been described as one of the finest mariners in the Australian trade. One of Captain Enright’s innovations was to publish a ship’s paper called The Lightning Gazette. (Captain Forbes had left to captain the SCHOMBERG.) In January 1855 Capt. Enright sailed the LIGHTNING from Liverpool with over 700 passengers and returned home carrying gold as her cargo. In 1857, for a very brief time under Capt. Byrne the LIGHTNING was used as a troop ship, taking British officers and soldiers, stores and ammunition, to fight in India. In 1859 she then returned to her run between Liverpool and Melbourne, apart from 1867 when she made a special trip between Melbourne and Port Chalmers in New Zealand. In 1869 the LIGHTNING was sold to Thomas Harrison of Liverpool, and she continued to sail for the Black Ball Line. Master of LIGHTNING, Captain Henry Jones, sailed her to Geelong in October 1869, and whilst docked, he had her loaded with a cargo of wool, copper, wire, tallow and other goods. At about 1am on 31st October 1869, whilst still docked and fully laden, a fire was noticed on the LIGHTNING. Efforts to extinguished the fire were unsuccessful, so she was towed to the shoals in Corio Bay, where she eventually sank, losing all cargo but no lives. The area is now known as Lightning Shoals. The LIGHTNING is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register VHR S415. She is historically significant for being one of the fastest wooden ships ever built, the first clipper built in the USA for British owners and being the worst shipping disaster in Geelong's history. It spent its whole career carrying cargo and immigrants from England to Australia.Sample of wood from the wool clipper LIGHTNING, 1854-1869, The sample has a label and a card with information about the ship and a person. Card, typewritten, "PIECE OF TIMBER FROM FAMOUS WOOL CLIPPER / "LIGHTNING". BUILD IN DONALD McKAY'S SHIPYARD / IN BOSTON, U.S.A.. SHE WAS BURNT TO TOTAL LOSS / IN GEELONG IN 1869"flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked-coast, flagstaff-hill, flagstaff-hill-maritime-museum, maritime-museum, shipwreck-coast, flagstaff-hill-maritime-village, sailing ship lightning, extreme clipper ship, american clipper ship, record breaking clipper ship, james baines, black ball line, donald mckay shipbuilder, captain ‘bully’ forbes, australian immigration, liverpool to melbourne migration, captain enright, captain byrne, captain henry jones, lightning shoals geelong, rabbits introduced to australia, wood sample from lightning -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Functional object - Wood sample, circa 1840
This oak wood sample is part of the wooden barque, the Grange, built in 1840. The wood sample was recovered from the shipwreck of the Grange in around 1968, 110 years after the Grange was wrecked (see below for further details on the Grange). It is part of the John Chance Collection. THE GRANGE, 1840-1858- The wooden barque ’Grange’ was a three-masted ship built in Scotland in 1840 for international and coastal trade. On March 22, 1858, the Grange set sail from Melbourne under Captain A. Alexander, carrying a cargo of ballast. The barque had left the Heads of Phillip Bay and was heading west along the Victorian coast towards Cape Otway. The ship struck Little Haley’s Reef at Apollo Bay due to a navigational error and was stuck on the rocks. The crew left the ship carrying whatever they could onto the beach. Eventually, the remains of the hull, sails and fittings were salvaged before the wreck of the Grange broke up about a month later. About 110 years later, in 1968, the wreck of the Grange was found by divers from the Underwater Explorers Club of Victoria. They were amazed to find a unique, six to nine pound carronade (type of small cannon) and a cannonball on the site. There have been no other similar carronades recorded. In that same year the anchor of the Grange was recovered by diver John Chance and Mal Brown. The wood sample is significant historically as an example of hardware used when building wooden ships in the early to mid-19th century. The sample is historically significant as an example of the work and trade of blacksmith. The sample is also has significant as it was recovered by John Chance, a diver from the wreck of the Grange in the 1968. Items that come from several wrecks along Victoria's coast have since been donated to the Flagstaff Hill Maritime Village’s museum collection by his family, illustrating this item’s level of historical value. The sample is historically significant for its association with the 1840s wooden barque, the Grange. The Grange is an historical example of a Scottish built vessel used for international and coastal trader of both cargo and passengers in the mid-19th century. The Grange is an example of an early ship, designed with a wooden hull. It is significant as a ship still available to divers along the south coast of Victoria, for research and education purposes. The Grange is an example of a mid-19th century vessel that carried a weapon of defence onboard. Wood sample, oak wood fixed between plates and secured by a washer and bolt. There are five layers, each decreasing in size from base to the top. The bottom is a five-sided copper plate, above it is the oak sample that is crumbling and fragile, then a half-disc metal plate, then a square metal washer, then a round metal bolt head. The metal plate has unequal sides, the longest is parallel to the strait side of the half disc. flagstaff hill, warrnambool, flagstaff hill maritime museum, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, flagstaff hill maritime village, great ocean road, west coast trader, apollo bay, mid-19th century shipwreck, the grange, scottish barque, little henty reef, captain a alexander, underwater explorers club of victoria, 1840s carronade, vhr 5297, coastal trader, wooden shipwreck, john chance, wood sample, wooden ship, oak timber, ship fitting -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Document - HANRO COLLECTION: SAMPLE BOOK, No date on item
Orange coloured manila folder with a glued on hand written label : ' Samples of Attachments in Sewing Room '. It consists of 25 cardboard pages and one loose cardboard insert. 17 of the pages have samples attached, by sellotape each end of the sample. The samples are of different fabrics and lace edgings. Eight pages at the rear of the folder are blankHanroorganization, business, hanro, hanro , clothing manufacturers, sewing room, fabric samples -
Federation University Historical Collection
Document, Sample Agreement between the Ballarat School of Mines and its Staff, 1880, 1880
Four blue pages of a sample agreement. ballarat school of mines, cuthbert and wynne, ballarat school of mines staff, agreement, legal, lecturers