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Conserving the Past for the Future
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Conserving the Past for the Future

A Conservation Tour

Belt for a Lady's Dress: Display and Tarnish Prevention


Belt for a Lady's Dress
Belt for a Lady's Dress
Italy, Siena (?), about 1375-1400
Enamel and gilding on silver, silver thread, gilt-silver buckle, cast and chased, 236.5 x 2.9 cm
Gift of the John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust 1930.742

About the Belt for a Lady's Dress


Detail of enamel and of the woven section
Detail of enamel and of the woven section


This belt, commonly called a girdle, would have been considered both a sumptuous ornament for the body and an object of great personal luxury because of its extraordinary richness. Almost eight feet in length, belts like this were at the height of fashion for both men and women at the end of the 14th century. The belt was passed around the waist and through the buckle; one end would fall to the hem of the garment.

The belt's many colorful enamel plaques are worked in translucent enamel over decoration engraved into the silver beneath (an enameler's technique known as basse-taille). The plaques display scenes of courtly love, musicians, and fantastic animals. A large number of translucent enamels were made for domestic use during the late Middle Ages-for use on jewelry, cups, wine fountains, and similar objects. This belt is a rare survivor among these now scarce objects.


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