I thought I was the only one who did that...  (VBG)....  I do not start
counting repeats until I had at least two under my belt.  Actually, I do not
do it too often, but some patterns seem to require overlapping.
 BArbE
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Clay Blackwell
  To: Bev Walker ; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Thursday, April 14, 2005 5:00 PM
  Subject: re: [lace] overlap joins


  Bev wrote -

  >  You are giving yourself the advantage, therefore, by making 'extra.' Of
  course I have yet to test the method myself (a Flanders hanky edging lies
  in wait, just for the purpose) but I believe it! --  <


  SO true!!  And if you're still hesitant, think of it THIS way...  You have
  the option of which end you discard.  This way, you're not working extra
  repeats at all...  you're giving yourself the opportunity to discard the
  first two or three repeats that weren't quite as pretty as the rest of the
  work!!  The attitude makes all the difference!!

  Clay

  Clay Blackwell
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]



  > [Original Message]
  > From: Bev Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  > Date: 4/14/2005 1:23:05 AM
  > Subject: re: [lace] overlap joins
  >
  > Alice wrote:
  >
  > > A common mistake of the beginner is to be so happy to have reached the
  > *end*, that they don't want to continue on for another couple repeats.
  >
  > LOL - this is what put me off trying the methods in 'Het Lassen' - which
I
  > invested in because I didn't like the joins I was making with tying knots
  > or doing sewings (butting beginning to end). I couldn't imagine making
  > more repeats than necessary -- time passes, that was then, this is now,
  > and I quite enjoy the chance to make more repeats than a complete
  > perimeter, and don't even mind that some of the extra will be cut away. I
  > think of the 'extras' as a means to the end (quite literally).
  >
  > > True, the actual overlap used is just a couple rows, but the end result
  > will be not as neat if there is little choice of sewing pathway.
  >
  > You are giving yourself the advantage, therefore, by making 'extra.' Of
  > course I have yet to test the method myself (a Flanders hanky edging lies
  > in wait, just for the purpose) but I believe it! --
  > bye for now
  > Bev in Sooke, BC (on Vancouver Island, west coast of Canada)
  > Cdn. floral bobbins
  > www.woodhavenbobbins.com
  >
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