Whenever this reviewer reads a new book by Gilian Dye, it is with the
assurance that some questions never asked will be answered, and these precious
nuggets of newfound knowledge will delight.

So it is with this third book in her series devoted to 16th and 17th
Century laces.  Here are 60 pages that anyone who has been reading 2013  book
reviews on Arachne covering this historic period will welcome.  Especially, if
they would like to reproduce laces seen in portraits,  pattern books, rare
surviving laces, and so forth.  She is now working  on a fourth book, which
will feature insertions and wider linen edgings  than those in the Isham
book.

What an elegant gift this book and some gold thread supplies would be for a
 dear friend!

Gil Dye has puzzled out all the stumbling blocks modern lace makers
encounter in "Le Pompe" (1559) and "Nüw Modelbuch" (1561) for her bobbin
lace-making audience.  She gives a list of 21st Century metallic  threads that
will
give good results, and offers a method for making  tear-drop-shaped spangles
(sequins), since they are not commercially available  today.  Modifying
bobbins for use with metallic threads is described and  pictured.  Detailed
diagrams come in handy for study of tricky bits, such  as 5-sequin tassels.
The results are mesmerizing.

It is great fun to follow the text by looking up portraits and antique
samples via computer.

The small boy (Prince Henry Frederick in 1596) pictured on the cover  was
born a Stuart (Mary Queen of Scots' grandson), but during the reign of
Elizabeth I - a Tudor.  The lavish use of gold laces on his clothing does  not
surprise, for he would have succeeded his father James VI (of Scotland) and
James I (of England) as king, if not for his death as a youth.  This, of
course, reminds of the book "The Tudor Child", reviewed in September.

The series to-date and a earlier related book are:
1.  Gold & Silver Edgings 978-0-9553223-3-4
2.  The Isham Samples and Other Linen Edgings 978-0-9553223-4-1
3.  Surface Decoration in Silk and Metallic Thread  978-0-9553223-5-8
and
4.  Elizabethan Lace 978-0-9553223-1-0

These are published by Cleveden Press (Jean Leader)
http://clevedenpress.wordpress.com/
They are available from your usual lace book suppliers.

For reviews of all books listed above:  Search Gil Dye at
http://www.mail-archive.com/lace@arachne.com/index.html

The October 2013 "Lace" bulletin #142 p.6 announces a Lace  Guild-sponsored
course:  Lace at Hardwick Hall with Gil Dye, 17-18 May  2014.  It is
related to this new book, and will be a lovely Spring treat  for lace makers
in
England.

Jeri Ames in Maine USA
Lace and Embroidery Resource Center

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