[lace] Morphic resonance?

2007-02-03 Thread Tamara P Duvall

Gentle Spiders,

My Lace (the quartely publication of the Lace Guild, UK) arrived today 
(is it late or am I off a month in my expectations?) I've only skimmed 
through it so far -- it's twice the size of the IOLI Bulletin, at 64 
pages -- but, even so, noticed some familiar names, like Jean Nathan on 
the cover with her Jack of Diamonds variations; congratulations, Jean 
N! And another of Janice Blair's cute confections-- this time an 
Easter Bunny sprouting from the bottom half of a (very spring-like) 
Easter egg, perky moustache, bowtie an'all.


But what really got my pulses racing was a pair of articles -- one from 
an Arachnean Jean Leader -- on reconstruction. Jean's article 
illustrates the reconstruction of 3 pieces of Freehand lace, from photo 
(or sample) through sketch, to new lace (and diagrams of tricky spots). 
Very informative, especially since I believe that Freehand lace 
techniques are particularly closely related to those of the earliest 
plaited laces. Thanks, Jean L!


The second article -- by Gil Dye -- reconstructs an early plaited lace, 
from a 1585 portait. Reconstructing from a painting has, to me, always 
bordered on a miracle. How on earth does one determine what kind of 
action to take (a windmill crossing? a partial crossing? all pairs 
through all pairs in cloth?), based only on a painting? No matter how 
close you can get to the source, no matter how good your magnifying 
glass... your guesses will be only as good as the painter's skill had 
been, and, since the painter wasn't a lacemaker, pitfalls yawn wide...


It's much more dicey, IMO, than using a woodcut as a pricking :)

What's even more interesting to me personally is the *timing*...

Here I've been, for a couple of months, discussing old laces in the Met 
with Devon and a few others and thinking about -- *maybe* -- trying my 
hand at reproducing some of the simpler ones. Which led me to getting 
Burkhard's Faszinierendes Klöppeln as a second (after the laser 
printer/copier/scanner) Christmas gift to myself (the book was *that* 
expensive, what with the shipping from Belgium :)  But I think it was 
the only copy available for purchase at this late date and I'm 
eternally obliged to Arachne for helping me locate it).


I was still at the stage of digesting Burkhard, at a leisurely pace 
(had other things on the front burner), when Orla mentioned sewings 
all over the place in a *plaited* Le Pompe pattern, and it didn't 
sound right. So, all of a sudden, I've pushed everything else to the 
back burner and have been working on that pattern ever since (one 
repeat done, but looks like dog's dinner. Hopefully, with my own 
semi-diagrams, the second repeat will be neater, since there'll be less 
guesswork and more uniformity). And, all that time, Lace was on its way 
to me, with two articles on the same or related subject...


Deborah Robinson (the Editor of Lace) once called such sudden 
erruption of a subject, propelled by forces from different 
directions, morphic resonance. Others call it synchronicity. Call 
it what you will, I find it freaky-scary :)


--
Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/
Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland)
 
 


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Re: [lace] Morphic resonance?

2007-02-03 Thread Helen Ward

An old saying is When the student is ready, the teacher will appear.
Sounds like that is what happened Tamara

Helen - in Oz.





Deborah Robinson (the Editor of Lace) once called such sudden
erruption of a subject, propelled by forces from different
directions, morphic resonance. Others call it synchronicity. Call
it what you will, I find it freaky-scary :)

--
Tamara P Duvall


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