Hi,

Does anyone know the highest price ever payed for a piece of lace?

Tiny

----- Original Message -----
From: "Jane Viking Swanson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "arachne" <lace@arachne.com>
Sent: Thursday, November 03, 2005 1:52 AM
Subject: [lace] Collecting lace


> Hi Tiny Dell and All,  You didn't say what country you live in but in the
US
> I find some nice pieces of lace in "Junque" stores.  Not antique shops but
> places with old stuff, some have different dealers with booths in one
large
> store.  I've gotten some nice pieces from eBay
> but you have to be very careful.  Ithaca Lace Days and the IOLI
Conventions
> always have lace dealers in the vendors room and it's wonderful to see
what
> they have!!!!!
>
> One of the best things I've done is to make sure everyone I know (and have
> ever met) knows that I love lace so I've been given some amazing pieces.
> I've always done fiber arts and many years ago a friend gave me a box of
> lace she found in the trash behind an antique store.  It's only been the
> last few years that I've known what I have!
>
> As has already been mentioned, a good lace ID book is also needed.  I
> particularly like "Guide to Lace and Linens" by Elizabeth Kurella ISBN
> 0-930625-89-7 and "The Identification of Lace" by Pat Earnshaw ISBN
> 0-85263-701-2.  Santina Levey's book "Lace - A History" is fabulous but
> quite expensive, you could try getting it through Interlibrary loan.
Being
> a book collector I like to have as many as I can because they all have
> different things to say about the laces and different pictures.
>
> I love having bits and pieces of different kinds of lace and they're very
> handy if you do a demonstration.  You can show people the different kinds
> when they say "my aunt used to do that".  Now I *try* to focus on the tape
> laces like Battenberg though I found a cool piece in Denver that is cut
> work - one corner of the pattern is finished and another is started with a
> heavy piece of something basted behind it.  I love partially done pieces
of
> lace <G>.  I also bought myself a little Point de Gaze butterfly.  Since I
> took Irma Osterman's class in Ithaca last year I have a new appreciation
of
> PdG and the Butterfly wasn't too expensive.  I also know it will be some
> years (if ever) before I make my own PdG butterfly!
>
> Taking a lace ID class will really open the world up for you too!!  I
don't
> seem to sit down and read the books I have and it's not the same as having
a
> teacher and many pieces of lace to look at while you're hearing about how
> the lace is made and how it differs from other laces and about its
history.
> Arachne is a good place to learn about different laces too!!  I was so
happy
> with the recent Sprang discussion - the piece from the museum was
fabulous!!
> But the name always makes me smile for some reason so I love when it
> resurfaces <G>.
>
> Jane in Vermont, USA where the leaves outside my windows are all yellow -
> looks like a sunny day even when it's cloudy!
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
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