[lace] lace on display

2004-07-21 Thread Jean Peach
If anyone is in the Budleigh Salterton area of
Devon during the summer.  There is a small display
of lace in their museum.  On Friday's there is a
lacemaker who comes from Honiton making lace
at the museum.

I only had a quick glass at the lace as I only
had one hour there, I was trying to get information
about my family from there records.

Jean in UK

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[lace] pillows

2004-07-21 Thread Helene Gannac
Adele Ward wrote:
Last time I counted, I had 20 or 21 pillows
My favorite are the straw ones made by Robin Lewis-Wild.

Wow, Adele, I didn't know she made pillows as well as write books. Is it
the same person?

Helene, the froggy from Melbourne

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Re: [lace] lace on display

2004-07-21 Thread Laceandbits
Jean's post about Budleigh Salterton has reminded me I meant to post about
the museum where the new Devon trolley net is on display.

I'm afraid I can't remember the name of the village (town?) but one of my
students went while she was on holiday and was most disappointed.  She said
that
the people at the reception desk didn't seem to even know the lace was in the
museum but when she tracked it down (in an upstairs room, I think) there were
only two small cases in a room with lots of other things (I explained that I
thought that's all that has been found), and the museum attendant in that room
knew nothing about it.

The book which has been mentioned on arachne is on sale (£16, I think) and a
couple of postcards with photos of the samples.

She went with non-lace friends and they thought her absolutely mad to want to
go out of her way to see scraps of lace - fortunately the village was
attractive so they were able to sightsee.

Jacquie

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Re: [lace] IOLI convention

2004-07-21 Thread Mary L. Tod
At 3:38 PM -0700 7/20/04, Janice Blair wrote:
Adele asked if anyone was organising a meeting this year at 
convention.  I will hopefully be arriving on Tuesday afternoon 
(driving) and I have meetings on Wednesday evening and Thursday 
lunch as well as classes Wednesday morning, Thurs., Fri. and Sat. 
If anyone locally is arranging for the room that is offered by the 
hosts please make sure there is a notice posted on the notice board 
(if any) so that we might be able to get together.  Does anyone know 
what the Taste of PA is on Thursday?  Does it mean we can count on 
not eating dinner?
Janice
How about if we try for Tuesday evening to get together? I will check 
with the KLG to see if we can get the event room -- if not, we can 
just gather somewhere, maybe the bar, after dinner.

--
Mary, in Baltimore, MD
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Re: [lace] IOLI convention

2004-07-21 Thread Mary L. Tod
At 3:38 PM -0700 7/20/04, Janice Blair wrote:
Adele asked if anyone was organising a meeting this year at 
convention.  I will hopefully be arriving on Tuesday afternoon 
(driving) and I have meetings on Wednesday evening and Thursday 
lunch as well as classes Wednesday morning, Thurs., Fri. and Sat. 
If anyone locally is arranging for the room that is offered by the 
hosts please make sure there is a notice posted on the notice board 
(if any) so that we might be able to get together.  Does anyone 
know what the Taste of PA is on Thursday?  Does it mean we can 
count on not eating dinner?
Janice
How about if we try for Tuesday evening to get together? I will 
check with the KLG to see if we can get the event room -- if not, we 
can just gather somewhere, maybe the bar, after dinner.

Replying to my own message: Here's the scoop from the KLG:
At 11:33 AM + 7/21/04, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There should be a room available, but Tuesday Night is also the 
Teachers' Showcase and Merchandise Night from 6:30 - 9:00 pm. Maybe 
you could adjust the meeting earlier/later to allow people time to 
meet the teachers and shop.

Monday night is free, Wednesday there will be people out on trips 
through the evening, Thursday is the Taste of PA from 5:30-11-ish 
pm, and Friday is the IOLI Annual Meeting.

May I also suggest the two hours between classes at lunch time? 
Lunches will be available as Grab n' Go, so everyone could get 
something and head off to a room or out on the covered deck. On 
Thursday, the Sales  Exhibit Rooms will not be open during lunch, 
so that may be an option, as well.
So, attendees, what say you about when to plan a get together? During 
a lunch break one day, or after the Tuesday Night Teacher's Showcase 
and Merchandise Night? Maybe 8:30 on Tuesday, which should leave 
enough time for the showcase.

--
Mary, in Baltimore, MD
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RE: [lace] Honiton boarder Pillows

2004-07-21 Thread Panza, Robin
From: peter vilsack [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Can anyone clue me in- I would like to make a border for a hankerchief in
Honiton lace and connect the motifs by pearl pin bars or needlelace
bars(buttonhole) 

What I would do is make the all motifs first, and make a pattern with the
motifs drawn in (and the connecting bars, so I knew in advance where they'd
look good).  Then I'd use a block (or cookie) pillow and work on part of the
pattern at at time, moving it as I finished one section, so I could continue
on around.  This is the way we do continuous lace for handkerchief borders
and I would think it would work just as well for putting the motifs
together.

Robin P.
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
http://www.pittsburghlace.8m.com/

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Re: [lace] Learning Needlelace

2004-07-21 Thread linda . walton
Hi everyone!

First I would like to say thank you to everyone who has replied to my 
question about making needlelace.

I'm sorry for the delay in replying, but I'm on holiday at my sister's house, 
and just don't seem to have got to the computer very often.  However, I have 
managed to make a little bobbin lace, which is a vast improvement over my 
usual level of production, and has made me very happy.

Next week, when I'm home again, I shall get out my etui of sewing things and 
see if I can make a start on the needlelace.  In fact, I do have one or two 
books already, but when I tried it all went wrong, and I couldn't understand 
what was supposed to be happening.  As the books are at home, I can't yet tell 
you what they are.  Once I've made another try, I'll be able to know where I'm 
finding difficulties, and I promise to come back and ask questions this time.  
(You may regret volunteering to help - I can be really dense . . ..)

Yours sincerely,
Linda Walton,
(in Goosnargh, Lancashire, U.K.,
where I've bought my 'fix' of Goosnargh cakes to take home with me,
and - hurray - we're off to the Tatton Park Flower Show in the morning).

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RE: [lace] Honiton boarder Pillows

2004-07-21 Thread Clay Blackwell
For what it's worth...  I think that Robin has described a really
traditional way of dealing with Honiton motifs, and I'd endorse that
suggestion!

Clay

Clay Blackwell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 From: Panza, Robin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 What I would do is make the all motifs first, and make a pattern with the
 motifs drawn in (and the connecting bars, so I knew in advance where
they'd
 look good).  Then I'd use a block (or cookie) pillow and work on part of
the
 pattern at at time, moving it as I finished one section, so I could
continue
 on around.  
 Robin P.

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[lace] changing email address

2004-07-21 Thread Dora Northern
Dear Arachneans,

I had so much trouble lately with spam, that I changed my E-mail address as
follows

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Greetings from the Knotter Dora UK

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[lace] Inspired by Lace

2004-07-21 Thread Clive and Betty Ann Rice
Gentle Spiders,

When Noelene let us know that she had finally gotten her book of poetry, *Inspired by 
Lace*  ready to share with us, I checked the exchange rate, went to my Pay Pal 
account, and ordered a copy.  Nolene put it in the post immediately and it seemed to 
have arrived overnight!  What a treat!

The little book of lace-inspired poems (to use Noelene's description) tells our 
story with humor and excellent insight.  We can see ourselves on every page.  Thank 
you Noelene for having this printed and making it so convenient for us to obtain. You 
are so talented.

No lacemaker should be without *Inspired by Lace* because it tells our story with 
humor and understanding; great fun... (usual disclaimers)

Happy Lacemaking
Betty Ann in Roanoke, Virginia USA

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[lace-chat] ON THIS DAY 21 1969 America lands man on the Moon.htm

2004-07-21 Thread Jean Peach
I have just been reading peoples memories on the BBC web page.

Where were you on the 21 July 1969?

My DH was working at Tidbinbilla Tracking Station  in Canberra, Australia.
working for NASA.

Although he was helping to track the men on the moon it was not until
20 years later that he saw the film of the men landing on the moon.
The reason for this was that there was no TV at the station for the
men to see this.

DH saw the first pictures come back from Space from the Mars mission,
Mariner 4, I have just asked him about, said  it was really slow coming back
in bits
per second.

I was working at the time, but took the day off, went into Canberra to get
some
cash at the bank, there were TV's at the bank, I was the only customer so
went back home to watch the TV.  There did not have a video recorder then.

Jean

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Re: [lace-chat] ON THIS DAY 21 1969 America lands man on the Moon.htm

2004-07-21 Thread Ruth Budge
I know where I was - sick in bed with a gastric bug!!   My mother had been over
to our house to retrieve my 6 months old son, so that I could enjoy my misery
in peace.  Mum had television, which we didn't, so she decided to sit Philip up
with a cushion behind him, so that he could watch history being madeshe
thought it would be nice that for the rest of his life he could claim he
watched the moon landing, even if he didn't remember it!!

As for me, I didn't care a hoot what they did ... on the moon, or off it!!
Ruth Budge (Sydney, Australia)

Jean Peach [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:I have just been reading peoples
memories on the BBC web page.

Where were you on the 21 July 1969?

My DH was working at Tidbinbilla Tracking Station in Canberra, Australia.
working for NASA.

Although he was helping to track the men on the moon it was not until
20 years later that he saw the film of the men landing on the moon.
The reason for this was that there was no TV at the station for the
men to see this.

DH saw the first pictures come back from Space from the Mars mission,
Mariner 4, I have just asked him about, said it was really slow coming back
in bits
per second.

I was working at the time, but took the day off, went into Canberra to get
some
cash at the bank, there were TV's at the bank, I was the only customer so
went back home to watch the TV. There did not have a video recorder then.

Jean

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[lace-chat] kangaroo meat

2004-07-21 Thread Helene Gannac
Jean said:
...When I said I can't eat anything with four legs, someone said What
about kangaroo meat? They've got two legs and two hands so you should be
OK with that. This person said I should say that I can only eat fish
and fin.
I know that biologically kangaroos are four-legged creatures, but what's 
the meat like? We can get it here, and I assume it's red meat.


Hi, jean,

I buy kangaroo meat whenever I find any on sale (it costs twice the price
of T-bone steak!!), because it is a very lean meat, without invisible fat
like beef or pork. It tends to be a bit tough if you don't cook it
properly. They usually tell you to marinate it for the night in oil or
various marinades which we can send you recipes for if you're interested.
When cooking it, you must either cook it very little, or very long, like a
stew.
However, it IS red meat, so I'm not sure whether you could eat it. Depends
of why you are allergic to red meat, I guess. If it is a question of its
composition, I would assume that you might have the same problems with it
than with beef or pork. 
Maybe you should google for the CSIRO site (our science and technology
Institute) and ask them! If someone knows, it would be them, they are
wonderful for answering problems.
Good luck

Helene, the froggy from Melbourne. Juast bought myself a pari of frog
earrings with movable legs! Adorable.


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[lace-chat] Kangaroo meat

2004-07-21 Thread Jean Nathan
From what you've all said, I think I'll give kangaroo meat a miss and stick
with feather and fin.

Jean

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[lace-chat] Arthritis in thumbs

2004-07-21 Thread Jean Nathan
In addition to what I posted yesterday, I contacted Sue directly about Tens
machines. I've also been thinking overnight about what else I do. I've been
doing them for so long that they've become normal.

I have ethafoam tubing over the handles of cutlery - it can be bought in
lengths for cutting, with different sized holes through the middle. I
haven't found proper cutlery which is more comfortable. Means that the thumb
isn't gripping so tightly or bent so far round the handle.

Loops on electric plugs. They fit around the plug so that you can just loop
fingers in and pull.

Lever taps. All my taps (fawcets) are the lever type - not as long a lever
as in hospitals. You can aso buy plastic handles to fit over the
star-handled type turning taps to turn them into lever taps.

A plastic tilting stand for my electric kettle so I don't have to lift the
kettle.

Tea made in the cup instead of the pot.

A  folding gripper for picking things up - useful for taking to the
supermarket when they stack things too high on the shelves.

A baby boa for opening jars - I find it much better than anything sold
secifically for the purpose.

A ring-pull puller

A right-angled handled carving knife

Electric scissors

Foam grips around pens and pencils

I also read newspapers and magazines flat on the table, and frequently put a
book on a sloping stand so I don't hold it - music stands can often be
bought quite cheaply.

Found a list of web site with disabled aids:

http://www.come-shopping.co.uk/directory_pages/disability_and_living_aids/2_
disabled_living_aids.htm

and looked at one which has a good (if expensive) range of products.

http://www.equalfuture.co.uk/ecommerce/EqualFuture

Jean in Poole

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[lace-chat] Arthritis in thumbs

2004-07-21 Thread Nøkkentved
Hello to everybody
I have with great interest been reading the thread about Arthritis in thumbs.
I have Arthrosis in most of my joints - and am regularely tested for
Arthritis.
Therefore I too have lots of problems doing things with my hands and sitting
because of my back
I have found out that testing, finding out what way is the best way to do the
things. I have found out that my leg-joints are feeling much more comfortable
if I am going down the stairs backwards - as the children do, and therefore I
do that.
I have bought crochet hooks with a handle - to be able to handle this, I have
put some foam-tubes on this handle, and then I can use the hooks again. The
very thin one I need to make thicker with some tape or something like that
before I put the foam-tube on it.
I have problems if I am using usuall bobbins and pillows - and therefore I
have tried other methods for lacing. I have found out that the bolsterpillow,
with the technique, where you hold your hands the other way, is much better.
So indeed it is possible to make lace at least some more timeOk I cannot
make the very fine lace anymore, but better this way, than no lace. As I have
found out that I will not be able to make so much lace anymore - I have tried
to find other things about lace that are interesting. And the fact that I
can do something that has something to do with lace - reading about
techniques, have started to do a little wookturning - so I now know how
difficulty it is to make those bobbins ;-) - it is all about testing, and then
take it the way you think is interesting Not just let it be, because
you cannot do it the way you used to do...
This is just my 2 cent about this subject - and I will go on reading more
about the subject if others have some other good advice.
Have a nice and lacy day - here it is raining and rather grey weather
(Denmark)
arne

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Re: [lace-chat] Kangaroo meat

2004-07-21 Thread Alice Howell
At 12:36 AM 7/21/2004, you wrote:
From what you've all said, I think I'll give kangaroo meat a miss and stick
with feather and fin.
For what it's worth, I suggest you avoid Emu, even if it is 
'feather'.  From the descriptions of Kangaroo, I would say Emu is the 
same.  Even if it is a bird, it is a red meat, no fat, and tends to be 
tough if cooked very much.

Alice in Oregon -- stealing a few moments from last minute packing.  Will 
leave in an hour or so for 5 days.  One stop this trip is the bead store. 

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[lace-chat] where were you on 21 July 1969

2004-07-21 Thread nicky.h-townsend
Hi Jean
Men on the moon didn't seem too big a deal to me in July 1969, I was only 10
years old and desperately missing my mum who had recently died ( aged 39
from lung cancer - she never smoked but my father did by the packet load), I
had been dumped into a convent boarding school (not wanted at home by my
father anymore as I had now become an inconvenience) and basically wanted to
die and be with my mum - seemed the best option at the time.
Sorry to sound down but reading the e.mail it kind of hit me - I still miss
her terribly even after all this time.

Nicky

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re:[lace-chat] ON THIS DAY 21 1969 America lands man on the Moon

2004-07-21 Thread Bev Walker
Hi everyone

I don't remember precisely what I was doing on this date but it must
have been a clear night - I recall looking up at the moon and telling
myself, in disbelief, that people were  there. I get claustrophobic
thinking about being in space, in a suit, in a capsule, in trust of
those on earth - too much Ziggy Stardust I think :~
Later on, on school trips to the BC provincial museum we would have to
have a look at the moon rock that was on display.
DH likes to check out the NASA site and every once in a while calls me
over to his computer to see something 'cool' - the Mars pictures were
fascinating.
For a look at the Apollo 11 stuff, go here:
http://www.nasa.gov

(very neat flash animation/presenation)

bye for now
Bev in Sooke, BC (west coast of Canada)

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[lace-chat] Re: Arthritis in thumbs

2004-07-21 Thread Jane Viking Swanson
Hi All,  Alice wrote that she can't work her mouse without her
thumb.  My suggestion is get a Turbo Ball (actually mine says
Kensington Expert Mouse on it).  It's a ball in a box with two
places to click on the right and left.  No thumb needed but you
do need a flat place to put it and a place to rest your wrist.

Jane in Vermont, USA 
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[lace-chat] Where were you on 21 July 1969

2004-07-21 Thread Jean Nathan
So sorry Nicky. Doesn't matter when you lose your parents, it's still hard.
I became an orphan in 1992 at the age of 49, but I still felt orphaned. My
mother had already died, and then my Father died. I was admitted to hospital
with they-didn't-know-what on Wednesday morning and my father's funeral was
on Friday. They wouldn't let me leave hospital to travel from Devon to
London to attend the funeral, so I never said goodbye. For months afterwards
I kept thinking that I must phone him.

In July 1969 DH and I lived in Brentwood, Essex to the east of London. We
settled down in front
of the TV for the evening to watch and hear the moon landing. Stayed up into
the night until we were too tired not to got to bed. We followed all the
Apollo missions.

When President Kennedy was killed, I was living in London in a pokey flat
downstairs to my grandparents-in-law. DH was working late and I was doing
the ironing. We didn't have a TV, and DH's grandmother came downstairs to
tell me she'd just seen the news on her TV that he'd been killed.

Can't remember where I was when Elvis died.

Jean in Poole

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[lace-chat] RE: arthritis

2004-07-21 Thread Helen Bell
Sue,

You might want to get her form of arthritis diagnosed, as there are very
many different types of arthritis - Rheumatoid, osteo, gout - to name
a few.  I would think that treatment varies according to the type.

I had an arthritis panel done last year to eliminate it as a cause of
ankle pain (turned out to be something totally unexpected as the
source), and learnt a little along the way.

I did try Vioxx - and it may be great for Dorothy Hamill, but did
nothing for me, except help me put on fluid weight :-(

One rub that I really like for my aches and pains, is Sombra - it's
supposedly natural ingredients with capsaicin (from capsicums/peppers) -
is nice and warming and smells fairly pleasant.  Tiger balm is also
wonderful!

There are lots of folk remedies around - like the apple cider vinegar
and honey drink each day, and limiting the amount of nightshades you
intake (like potatoes, eggplant, tomatoes), WD40 sprayed on the joint,
etc.

Not sure this helps much.  Good luck with your mum though.

Cheers,
Helen, Aussie in Denver, awaiting the arrival of the Cold Front tomorrow
:-) 

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[lace-chat] RE:man on the moon

2004-07-21 Thread Helen Bell
My parents did that to me too - made me watch it, even though I don't
really remember it - more from the video from later years.  I was 5 at
the time.  I vividly remember Apollo 13 though (love the movie), and
remember thinking about what would happen if they couldn't get them back
down, and especially Apollo 17 and the Moon Buggy - we got to watch that
in school :-)

Cheers,
Helen, Aussie in Denver. 

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[lace-chat] I'm all chuffed!

2004-07-21 Thread Linda
Please pardon, but I gotta share my excitement!  I've just published my first
attempt at a web site for our orchid nursery.  It's been a real learning
experience for a techno-illiterate like me.  It's not much, I found a thingie
I could buy that has templates and all that just to get it out there.  Now all
I have to do is graduate to Front Page or something (any suggestions -
instructions?) and make a real site.  With pages that interact more and
thumbnails that super-size and everything!

Thanks for listening - you're the greatest bunch and I knew that if anyone
would understand my sense of accomplishment, you all would.

Linda, the string-a-holic in Oregon, where we're told to expect a heat wave
for the next week or so - the high 90's - blech!

Oh, p.s. it's www.skyislandorchids.com if anyone is interested.

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