Stone Age
sewing
sewing
(c, 25,000 B.C.E)
Clothing is fitted using needle and thread.
The history of sewing
is closely allied to the history of tools. The earliest needles ever discovered
date from the Paleotliathic era (the early Stone age), around 25,000 B.C.E Key finds from that period include needles in
southwest France and near Moscow in Russia, These were made of ivory or bone,
with an eyelet gouged out . Some have been found alongside the remains of foxes
and hares that were used for their fur.
Sewing gave our early ancestors
the opportunity to make clothing more
closely tailored to the human body, improving its insulation and comfort, as
well as inviting decoration,. Early
scraps of cloth found in France and Switzerland have included decorative seeds
or animal teeth sewn on by thread, applied perhaps with the aid of fishbones or
thorns. Native Americans sewed with the tips of agave leaves.
Metal needles were
developed in the Bronze Age (2000-800 B.C.E) and initially were made of several
strands of wire melted together. Needles from this wea have been gound in North
Africa and China , where steel was introduced. The first known stitched buttonhole
dates from 4200 B.C.E.
Embroidery—complex,
decorative needlework—appeared in Bronze Age Egypt and India. In China silk was
being sewn and embroidered in the same era. protective thimbles have been used
since Roman times. The famous Bayeux Tapestry, depicting the Norman invasion of
England, is an example of crewelwork, a form of embroidery wirh loosely twisted
yarn. At least four types of stitch have been identified in the tapestry. Later
, the mechanization of textile production began in the sixteenth century with
the stocking frame, which led to automated looms. Hand-stitching was
transformed from the 1830s onward by the arrival of the sewing machine.
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