Fine decorative lace with a pattern of small tooth-like projections or a style of ornamental edging used in architecture and fashion.
From Old French 'dentelle,' derived from 'dent' meaning tooth. Originally referred to lace-like architectural details, then came to mean actual lace fabric with tooth-patterned edges common in European craftsmanship.
Dentelle lace became wildly popular in 17th-century Europe as a status symbol—some pieces were as expensive as gold because they were made entirely by hand with tiny needles, taking months to complete!
Dentelle (lace) became gendered feminine in European textile history, with 18th–19th-century production and marketing targeted at women despite male master craftsmen controlling major guilds. The word accumulated associations with 'delicate' femininity while erasing male weavers' skilled labor from everyday speech.
Use 'lace', 'lace textile', or 'dentelle' (French architectural term) neutrally. Note historical makers regardless of gender when discussing production.
["lace","lace textile","filigree (architectural)","lattice"]
Male lacemakers and weavers, especially in Flanders, Italy, and France, created most high-value dentelle but are historically overshadowed by gendered language positioning lace as 'women's work.' Crediting guild masters and artisans by name restores accuracy.
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