Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- List of contributors -- In memoriam Peter Collingwood -- Section I Tablet weaving -- Chapter 1 ’Tablet weaving is a small byway of textile production…’: Bronze and Iron Age tablet bands with stripes, meanders and triangles from the salt mines in Austria -- Chapter 2 The use of weaving tablets in the production of headdresses in Egypt in the Roman and Byzantine periods: A study of a bourrelet from Antinoopolis -- Chapter 3 Evidence of tablet weaving from Viking-age Dublin -- Chapter 4 The so-called ’Palermo bands’ and their technique -- Section II Sprang -- Chapter 5 Hairnets with gold tube beads from the Roman Rhineland and their textile technique -- Chapter 6 Sprang hairnets from the necropolis of Fag el-Gamous in the Fayum, Egypt -- Chapter 7 Tight-fitting clothing in antiquity and the Renaissance: Research and experimental reconstruction -- Section III Braiding and lace making -- Chapter 8 Braided strings and Turk’s head knots on European secular and religious textiles -- Chapter 9 A unique survival: A woman’s fifteenth-century headdress from Lengberg Castle, East Tyrol -- Chapter 10 From narrow four-strand plaits to openwork bobbin-made braids and edgings -- Section IV Spinning -- Chapter 11 The story of twist: Handspinning as a medieval craft.
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