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Master Mason Bullion Rays Apron – Royal Blue Velvet Silver Bullion

Original price was: $159.Current price is: $99.

4.38 out of 5

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Description

Master Mason Bullion Rays Apron – Royal Blue Velvet Silver Bullion

Royal blue velvet absorbs Lodge lighting in a way that ribbon and satin apron materials cannot. The pile surface pulls the color into depth rather than reflecting it flat, and under the overhead lighting of a degree room, that depth gives silver bullion embroidery the contrast it needs to read with full dimensional weight. When silver bullion rays radiate from the all-seeing eye on the blue velvet flap, each ray catches the light individually across its raised surface. That is what bullion thread does that machine thread and silver metallic ribbon cannot replicate — it holds the light across a three-dimensional surface rather than catching it in a single flat plane.

The all-seeing eye with radiating bullion rays on the flap is the specific symbol arrangement this Master Mason apron places at the apex of the degree presentation. In Lodge ceremony, the all-seeing eye represents the omniscience the degree tradition places at the highest point of the symbolic structure. Its position on the flap, worked in silver bullion against royal blue velvet, ensures it reads from across the Lodge room during every degree night and stated meeting the Master Mason attends.

On the apron body, the square and compasses emblem with the G sits centered in silver bullion embroidery against the white ground, surrounded by the decorative rays that frame the central symbol. The silver bullion thread is applied by hand, which means each stitch of the ray pattern and the square and compasses geometry was placed individually by a craftsman. Hand application produces consistent thread tension across the full embroidered surface without the mechanical pull variation that machine embroidery introduces on curved or radiating stitch patterns.

Royal blue velvet on the flap and border against the white apron body carries the color arrangement Blue Lodge Master Mason regalia tradition establishes at this degree level. The velvet flap sitting above the white body gives the apron a clear visual division between the degree symbol field above and the primary symbol field below. Both embroidered elements occupy their correct positions within that divided surface.

The silver plated snake fitting on the adjustable belt maintains the silver metallic register of the bullion embroidery across every visible element of the apron. A gold or chrome fitting on a silver bullion apron breaks the color discipline the construction maintains. Silver plating on the snake fastener holds that discipline and holds its set waist position through the full length of a Lodge ceremony without adjustment.

Soft padding behind the apron face holds the flat presentation through a full degree evening, and the rear pocket carries officer items without affecting the front drape or the way the velvet surface hangs during procession.

Silver Thread — Blue Velvet — Earned in the Lodge

Specifications

  • Material: Royal blue velvet, white apron body
  • Embroidery: Silver bullion hand embroidery
  • Belt: Adjustable with silver plated snake fitting
  • Ribbon: None
  • Fringe: None
  • Padding: Soft padding throughout
  • Pocket: Rear pocket included

Q: What type of embroidery is on this Master Mason apron?

A: The apron features silver bullion hand embroidery throughout, with craftsmen applying each stitch individually by hand to produce the dimensional, light-catching surface that bullion thread delivers on royal blue velvet.

Q: Why is royal blue velvet used instead of ribbon or satin?

A: Royal blue velvet pile absorbs Lodge lighting and creates a color depth that gives silver bullion embroidery its maximum contrast and dimensional read. Flat materials reflect light uniformly and reduce the visual impact of raised bullion thread work.

Q: What symbols are embroidered on this apron?

A: The royal blue velvet flap carries the all-seeing eye with radiating silver bullion rays. The white apron body carries the square and compasses with G, also surrounded by silver bullion rays, both worked entirely by hand.

Q: What belt fitting does this apron use?

A: The adjustable belt uses a silver plated snake fitting that matches the silver bullion embroidery register and holds its set waist position through the full length of a Lodge degree or stated meeting without adjustment.

Product Features

Silver bullion hand embroidery on royal blue velvet flap and white body

Craftsmen apply each stitch of the all-seeing eye rays and square and compasses emblem by hand through the royal blue velvet and white apron surfaces, producing the dimensional light-catching finish that raised bullion thread delivers against deep velvet pile.

Royal blue velvet construction for maximum embroidery contrast

The velvet pile absorbs Lodge lighting and creates the color depth that gives silver bullion embroidery its full dimensional read, producing a surface quality that ribbon and satin apron materials cannot replicate at this degree level.

Silver plated snake belt with soft padding and rear pocket

The silver plated fitting maintains the metallic register of the bullion embroidery across every visible apron element, soft padding holds the flat velvet presentation through the full degree evening, and the rear pocket carries items without affecting the front drape.

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