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Monday, February 9, 2026
Murano & Burano, Venetian Lagoon, Venice, Italy
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Burano Lace History - From Punto in Aria to Today

Discover Burano lace history: stitches like punto in aria and punto Venezia, the 19th‑century school, and how the craft survives today.

11/2/2025
12 min read
Hands stitching delicate Burano lace with needle and thread

Burano lace grew from Venice’s taste for lightness — the desire to make stone and fabric look like air.

Birth of a style

  • 16th–17th centuries: Punto in aria (stitch in air) freed lace from fabric, building patterns on temporary supports.
  • Punto Venezia and punto Burano developed florals, scrolls, and architecture in thread.

Fall and revival

  • Industrial lace eroded demand; knowledge retreated into families.
  • In the 1870s–90s, a Burano lace school revived techniques, training new lacemakers and rebuilding prestige.

Today’s ateliers

  • Small workshops balance tradition with contemporary motifs.
  • True handmade work is slow and costly — which is exactly why it matters.

Learn one motif — say, a rosellina — and you’ll start seeing Burano differently: not just color‑washed facades, but a culture woven by hand.

About the Author

Cultural Historian

Cultural Historian

I put this guide together to make your Murano & Burano day simple, insightful, and full of local tips.

Tags

Burano
Lace
History
Stitches
Venice

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