RE: [lace] Rose Ground

2014-07-11 Thread Maureen
The rose ground I use for beginners is, following your sequence

A CTC
B CTC
1 CT, pin CT
2 CT, pin CT
3 CT, pin CT
4 CT, pin CT
C,,, CTC
D,,, CTC

By being the same stitch throughout it means that they are not concentrating
on the different stitch as well as the sequence of working.  It is more open
than your version though which I use regularly.

Maureen
E Yorks UK

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[lace] Rose Ground

2014-07-11 Thread Jane Partridge
Same stitch throughout do you perhaps use CT at the corners instead 
of CTC?


I wondered more if anyone uses or prefers one of the less common forms, 
than who does the same as me, and if so, what stitch combinations they 
use?



In message 002c01cf9cdf$3db47370$b91d5a50$@roger.karoo.co.uk, Maureen 
maur...@roger.karoo.co.uk writes

The rose ground I use for beginners is, following your sequence

A CTC
B CTC
1 CT, pin CT
2 CT, pin CT
3 CT, pin CT
4 CT, pin CT
C,,, CTC
D,,, CTC

By being the same stitch throughout it means that they are not concentrating
on the different stitch as well as the sequence of working.  It is more open
than your version though which I use regularly.

Maureen
E Yorks UK



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Jane Partridge

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[lace] Rose Ground

2014-07-10 Thread Jane Partridge
Just out of interest, what is your favourite combination of stitches for 
Rose Ground?


I tend to stick with the corner intersections (which I label a, b, c, d) 
as CTCT and then the centre pins (1, 2, 3, 4) CT, pin, CT. But there are 
numerous other ways of working the blocks (see Bobbin Lace Stitches and 
Introduction to Bobbin Lace Stitches) and as the list is quiet, thought 
I'd ask.


For clarity, ignore the , which I'm using as spacers, this is the 
sequence I work the stitches - a, b, 1, 2, 3, 4, c, d (where c an d 
become the next a and b)


a,,1,,b

2..3

c,,4,,d
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Jane Partridge

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[lace] Rose ground Help Please

2005-05-20 Thread Noelene Lafferty
Hope this will help Jane:
Doris Southard's first example of rose ground works the simple CT between the
four pin diamonds drawn in the pricking.

Isolate your four pairs of bobbins, two pair from the left and two pair from
the right above the four pin diamond shape in your pricking.

Each pair should already have their required one twist in them.   If not, put
one in.

You then take the left hand pair of bobbins and work CT but you don't put in a
pin.

Then take the right hand pair of bobbins and work CT, again without a pin.

Now take the centre two pairs of bobbins  and work CT, pin, CT, with the pin
going into the top of the four pin diamond marked on your pricking.

Now take the left pair of bobbins and work CT, pin, CT, with the pin going
into the left pinhole of the four pin diamond..

Then the right pair of bobbins and work CT, pin, CT, with the pin going into
the right pinhole of the four pin diamond..

Next take the centre two pairs of bobbins and work CT, pin CT, with the pin
going into the bottom of the four pin diamond.  That's the four pin diamond
done, but you haven't finished yet ..

Now take the left hand pair of bobbins and work CT but you don't put in a
pin.

Finally take the right hand pair of bobbins and work CT, again no pin.

And that's your first bit of rose ground complete.

If you're using Doris Southard's pricking, now move to the other set of four
bobbins, isolate them, and do the same thing.

Now, when you go on to your next bit of rose ground going down the diagonal,
(In Doris Southard's pricking, it is in the middle of her sample strip) and
you isolate your four pairs of bobbins for that, you will find that they will
already have the CT without a pin, so you can start on the four pin diamond
straight away.

In future work, just make sure that when you start a big of rose ground, that
both pairs of bobbins have CT without a pin before you start the four pin
diamond.

Noelene in Cold, Cold and still bone dry Cooma.
Oh, for some rain!
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~nlafferty/

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