(Redirected from Picadils)The 'piccadill' or ''pickadill'' is the name of a large broad collar of
cut-work lace that became
fashionable in the late
16th century and early
17th century.
The term originates from the Spanish "picadillo" and "picado" meaning "punctured" or "pierced". The lace collars of the seventeenth century contained much elaborate cut work giving them the name "picadura" (sp.) and "piccadill".
Examples of a piccadill can be seen on portraits of
Queen Elizabeth I and other portraits of her contemporaries such as
Sir Walter Raleigh. Makers of piccadills were very specialized and for the most part were located in a centralized part of
London which is now called
Piccadilly Circus.