About Riamorre
A reference resource on Polish bobbin lacemaking: technique, regional patterns, and material culture.
What This Site Covers
Riamorre documents the craft of bobbin lacemaking as practised in Poland — specifically the tradition known as koronka klockowa, meaning lace made on bobbins. The site focuses on three interconnected areas: the working techniques used to produce openwork lace structures, the visual patterns associated with different Polish regions, and the physical instruments involved in the craft.
The content is informational in character, drawing on publicly available documentation, ethnographic collections, and established scholarship on Central European textile traditions.
Geographic Focus
Polish bobbin lace has historically been produced in several distinct regional centres. This site gives attention to each of the main traditions:
- Silesian Beskids — including the village of Koniaków and surrounding settlements in the Żywiec area, which developed the most internationally recognised Polish lace tradition during the twentieth century.
- Kurpie region — northeast of Warsaw, characterised by bold geometric thread patterns worked primarily in white cotton.
- Lesser Poland — including the Kraków area and Podhale highlands, where lace production intersected with broader textile and folk art traditions.
- Lower Silesia — historically part of Central European lace networks that extended into Bohemia and Saxony, with documented production in the Kłodzko area.
Sources and References
Information published on this site draws on publicly accessible sources, including:
- The collections of the State Ethnographic Museum in Warsaw (Państwowe Muzeum Etnograficzne w Warszawie)
- The Ethnographic Museum in Kraków (Muzeum Etnograficzne im. Seweryna Udzieli w Krakowie)
- Documentation held by regional cultural centres in the Żywiec and Łomża areas
- Wikimedia Commons for public-domain and openly licensed photographic material
- Published academic and ethnographic studies on Central European lace traditions
External links on this site point only to publicly accessible institutional sources. No affiliate relationships exist with any of the organisations referenced.
Content Updates
Articles are updated when new documented information becomes available or when corrections are warranted. Each article carries a date indicating the most recent substantive revision.
Contact
Corrections, additional source references, or research inquiries may be submitted using the contact form on the home page. Responses are not guaranteed for all submissions, particularly those outside the subject scope of the site.
Disclaimer
This site presents documented information on a traditional craft. It does not represent any commercial enterprise, cultural association, or government body. Content is published for informational purposes. No warranty is made regarding completeness or current accuracy of any specific detail, as craft practices and institutional records evolve over time.