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Oya - "Turkish Lace"
1.       peacetrain
1905 posts
 02 Jan 2009 Fri 12:27 pm

I´ve been given several scarves, edged with this ´lace´, some using colours that blend beautifully with the scarf and others that clash very loudly.  Having read the article, I´m wondering what messages these scarves had for me!  I particularly liked the way the comment "Women reaching forty used a bent tulip."  was tagged on to the end of the paragraph explaining flowers used by women in various stages of their lives.

 

Oya, The Language of Anatolian Women

Anatolia’s thousand and one species of plants and gaily colored flowers are reborn in the imagination and inner eye of its women. The history of the decorative edging known in Europe as ‘Turkish lace’ is thought to date back as far as the 8th century B.C. to the Phrygians of Anatolia. Some sources indicate that needlework spread from 12th century Anatolia to Greece and from there via Italy to Europe. Traditionally, the headdresses and scarves women wore on their heads, the printed cloths, and prayer and funeral head coverings were decorated with various kinds of oya, which was also used on undergarments, to adorn outer garments, around the edges of towels and napkins and as a decorative element in many other places. In the Aegean region even men’s headdresses were decked with layers of oya.

 

Oya edging, which appears all over Anatolia in various forms and motifs, has different names depending on the means employed: needle, crochet hook, shuttle, hairpin, bead, tassel to name just a few. Sewing needle oya is a variety that was produced by affluent, aristocratic, urban women. The most beautiful examples of such oya, which was usually made with a sewing needle using silk thread, were produced in the Ottoman Palace.

 

Crochet work can be done in different ways in colors of one’s choosing by using a single crochet hook. It differs from sewing needle oya in that it employs thicker thread and is less delicate in appearance. Shuttle oya is produced more by women in the villages and provincial towns, using a small shuttle made of bone. Either one or two colors are used. ‘Firkete’ or hairpin oya is made by threading beads, sequins, coral or pearls onto thread of a single color. ‘Çaput’ meanwhile, which is more common in the villages where very beautiful and creative examples are produced with limited means, is done by cutting and folding colorful pieces of coarse cloth into squares and using a crochet hook. Crochet hooks are also used for adding tassels. Beaded edging, which is frequently encountered in Anatolia, is done by threading beads of various colors onto the ends of oya made either with a sewing needle or a crochet hook. Finally, silk thread and cocoon fragments are the materials of ‘koza’ or cocoon lace oya, whose primary motifs are created by the cocoons and later added on to oya produced with either a sewing needle or a crochet hook.

 

Young maidens, new brides, and young women traditionally conveyed their loves—whether hopeful or hopeless, their expectations, their good tidings, their happiness and unhappiness, their resentment and their incompatibility with their husbands to those around them through the oya they wore. In the Marmara and Aegean regions, for example, floral oya is a phenomenon in and of itself. A woman adorned her head with oya embodying flowers, nature’s loveliest gift to man, the species of the flowers differing depending on her age. Aged grannies used tiny wild flowers, which symbolize the return of dust to dust. Virgins, brides and young women employed roses, arbor roses, carnations, jasmine, hyacinths, violets, daffodils, chrysanthemums and fuchsia in their oya. And all of them carry messages which are conveyed through their shapes and colors. Women reaching forty used a bent tulip.

 

The full article can be found at

http://www.turkishculture.org/pages.php?ParentID=14&ID=70

2.       TheresaJana
163 posts
 02 Jan 2009 Fri 12:35 pm

Peacetrain, That is really fabulous and creative! My Great Grandmother made these lacy edges and cut outs on various things from handkerchiefs to tablecloths and at the edges of collars and doilies and it was called ´tatting´.     You have to wonder about the beginnings of this type of creativity started probably from fishermen making their nets to the creative and wonderful artistic pieces such as in your article.  I love all that sort of stuff.  Nice to know someone else out there likes it too.  hehe

3.       peacetrain
1905 posts
 02 Jan 2009 Fri 12:44 pm

 

Quoting TheresaJana

Peacetrain, That is really fabulous and creative! My Great Grandmother made these lacy edges and cut outs on various things from handkerchiefs to tablecloths and at the edges of collars and doilies and it was called ´tatting´.     You have to wonder about the beginnings of this type of creativity started probably from fishermen making their nets to the creative and wonderful artistic pieces such as in your article.  I love all that sort of stuff.  Nice to know someone else out there likes it too.  hehe

 

 Yes, I remember a teacher of mine in the 60s used to walk around the school playground "tatting". She used a sort of miniature shuttle rather than a hook.  I´ve never had a go myself although I can knit and crochet.  An aunt of mine taught me when I was 4.  Sadly it´s 20 years since I did any but it seems it´s still very popular in Turkey and it made me want to start again.  Trouble is, finding the time . . . life is hectic.

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