[lace] Re: Lace teaching happened!

2009-08-11 Thread Tamara P Duvall

On Aug 11, 2009, at 12:39, Chris Vail wrote:

I taught a beginner 16th c. bobbin lace course.  It was... 
interesting. I usually teach this class in two hours to about 6 people 
at a time (basic twist and cross, plaiting -- I

don't cover picots).


And just as well, since there don't seem to have been any true picots 
then :)


In the past two years, I looked at lots of the earliest laces, often in 
great magnification. And I've asked Devon to pay special attention to 
them for me, in her weekly trips to the Metropolitan, where she 
volunteers and has access to the said laces. Nothing. Zero. Picots 
don't seem to appear until much later, when the laces began to get 
really fine.


What those early laces do have are mock picots which we know as 
winkie pins.


For linen and silk, Twist the worker pair (or the pair nearest the pin, 
in a plait) at least 3 times (or more; some of those early picots are 
really overtwisted), put a pin under it and keep working. For 
metallic/metal thread, Twist the pair, place the pin under *just one* 
(outer) thread, Twist the pair again and keep working.



On Aug 11, 2009, at 13:20, Regina Hart wrote (re Chris' message):

 Do you have prickings/diagrams for early work?  I'd like to learn 
more about
bobbin lace in this early period, and I wouldn't mind replicating a 
piece or

two.


OK, I'm not Chris and can't answer for her (him?) as to what sources 
*s/he* used, but...
In addition to several books on the subject, the IOLI Bulletin has been 
publishing -- beginning with vol.27, #4 (summer 2007) -- my 
reconstructions of some of the simpler early laces, mostly from Le 
Pompe. Not to blow my own horn too loudly, but, while not perfect (I'm 
working on a correction for one of them, right now g), they're not 
half bad, either. And most are simple enough so that they can be made, 
by-the-many- yard, as needed for those early costumes. Nor am I 
finished reconstructing... And, during that same time, others have also 
written articles (some with prickings and diagrams) on the earliest 
laces.


So, join us. Subscribe to IOLI, which will allow you to borrow the old 
issues and will assure you of getting anything new that comes out as 
well. By-and-by, you should be able to assemble a library of patterns 
for every occasion to choose from.


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

-
To unsubscribe send email to majord...@arachne.com containing the line:
unsubscribe lace y...@address.here. For help, write to
arachnemodera...@yahoo.com


RE: [lace] Re: Lace teaching happened!

2009-08-11 Thread Noelene Lafferty
I don't remember if anyone has mentioned Rosemary Shepherd's new book, An
Early Lace Workbook which she published recently, which covers the subject
of mock picots.

You can read more about the book on her website, www.lacedaisypress.com.au.

I'm having some fun at the moment working a simple metallic thread strip on
gingham (instead of a pricking) which is only pinned by the mock picot.

Noelene in Cooma
nlaffe...@ozemail.com.au

 What those early laces do have are mock picots which we know as
 winkie pins.

-
To unsubscribe send email to majord...@arachne.com containing the line:
unsubscribe lace y...@address.here. For help, write to
arachnemodera...@yahoo.com