l" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "lace Arachne"
Sent: Friday, May 27, 2005 12:41 AM
Subject: [lace] Re: BLacing with hair
> On May 26, 2005, at 9:47, Mark, aka Tatman wrote:
>
> > You don't need a pillow and bobbins to do bobbinlace LOL!
>
> No, you don't
On May 28, 2005, at 11:06, Antje González wrote:
Very interesting your story. This reminds me of a girl in my daughters
class, exactly 13 years ago. She was a portuguese gipsy. And so, her
mother
used to take her to school with a very long thick and black braid (much
longer than her waist!). I
>> there was one girl in my class who knwe how to "plait in 4"... She was
the most popular girl, showered with gifts and friendship :) If you were in
her good graces, she'd take apart your "schoolgirl two" that Clay mentions,
and re-do them "her style"... 30 yrs later, when I started making lace, I
On May 26, 2005, at 19:00, Clay Blackwell wrote:
Since I had a hard time doing the "schoolgirl" two braids on my own
daughter's head when she was young, I am more than impressed with the
skill
required for these hairstyles!
When I was in primary school, most of us had long hair (or, as long
On May 26, 2005, at 9:47, Mark, aka Tatman wrote:
You don't need a pillow and bobbins to do bobbinlace LOL!
No, you don't :)
I used a halfstitch ground to weave the back of my niece's hair for
prom this year. Kind of tiring on her part to lay there as we
separated the strands, gelled them,
Actually my wife went to beautician school and one of her achievements was
to weave a hat made directly from the hair on the mannequin's head. Altho it
wasn't done in the BL technique But probably similar half stitch ground
if I remember the way she described it. Was a popular 70s/80s hair weave