Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread J D Hammett

Hi Jenny and fellow Arachnids,

Could these be part of a game? The holes on these items go from 1 to 8 which 
could be significant. I will contact the seller and suggest it to him/her.


Happy New Year full of lace making!

Joepie, East Sussex, UK




-Original Message- 
From: Jenny Brandis

Sent: Tuesday, December 31, 2013 4:16 AM
To: lace@arachne.com
Subject: [lace] lace bobbins?

Are these actually lace bobbins? What would you use them for?

http://www.rubylane.com/item/370063-004620/9-Antique-Chinese-Hand-Carved



Jenny Brandis

Kununurra, Western Australia

je...@brandis.com.au mailto:je...@brandis.com.au

www.brandis.com.au http://www.brandis.com.au/

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread Sue Duckles
Hi All

I agree, no way can they be lace bobbins as any of us know them...
however

In Elizabethan times in the UK bones were carved with holes slightly bigger
than this, but the item was around the same size the centre was stuffed
with sheeps wool and they were worn inside the clothing to catch the fleas,
lice etc

One solution to the question of what they may be anyway

Sue in East Yorkshire where we're expecting more very high tides over the next
few days...

My Tatty Blog http://pigminitatty.blogspot.co.uk/

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread AGlez
At first sight, I thought they could be flutes. But after seing that the
holes are different in each stick... I think my guess is incorrect.

Then I thought the sticks can be part of a mobile that emits relaxing
sounds, kind of this:
http://www.maykaesoterismo.com/images/moviles/PERFUMES%20005.JPG

Well, just thinking aloud

Have a Happy New Year 2014!


Antje, from Spain... cold and misty.
https://www.etsy.com/shop/TwistAndCrosshttps://www.etsy.com/shop/TwistAndCross?ref=pr_shop_more

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread David C COLLYER

At 03:16 PM 31/12/2013, Jenny Brandis wrote:

Are these actually lace bobbins? What would you use them for?

http://www.rubylane.com/item/370063-004620/9-Antique-Chinese-Hand-Carved


They look more like mini recorders, flutes or pan pipes to me
David in Ballarat, where it's now 2014!!

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread AGlez
But then, David, why are there different number of holes?


Antje
González, from Spain.

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread Clay Blackwell
Antje, I had the same thought...  and also thought it might be far-fetched.  
There don't appear to be any holes or grooves to secure the various pieces.  
But if secured on a base, perhaps they were part of an Aeolian Harp?  The holes 
would make each pipe create a different sound.

Clay

Sent from my iPad

 On Dec 31, 2013, at 7:24 AM, AGlez antje.gonza...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 At first sight, I thought they could be flutes. But after seing that the
 holes are different in each stick... I think my guess is incorrect.
 
 Then I thought the sticks can be part of a mobile that emits relaxing
 sounds, kind of this:
 http://www.maykaesoterismo.com/images/moviles/PERFUMES%20005.JPG
 

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread David C COLLYER

Jane

I'm wondering if, as each would make a different sound and there are 
eight notes in an octave, these are actually from a wind chime?


Me too, but then I remembered that the Chinese use the Pentatonic 
scale which requires only 5 holes :(

David in Ballarat, AUS
0103 hrs on Jan 1st 2014

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread Sue Babbs
I go with everyone who thinks they are a musical instrument. The holes to me 
signify some sort of flute.


Maybe 9 of the pipes of a pan pipe:

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1233465/paixiao




Sue


http://www.rubylane.com/item/370063-004620/9-Antique-Chinese-Hand-Carved

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread Karen Sammie Manduca
That's really interesting Sue. Where did you find out about it and what would 
the items have been called?

Karen in Malta

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RE: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-31 Thread Angel Skubic
This was my first thought too and they would each have a different tone so
they would make a very musical windchime...

Cearbhael

-Original Message-
From: AGlez
Sent: Tuesday, December 31, 2013 6:24 AM
To: Arachne
Subject: Re: [lace] lace bobbins?


Then I thought the sticks can be part of a mobile that emits relaxing
sounds, kind of this:
http://www.maykaesoterismo.com/images/moviles/PERFUMES%20005.JPG

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins?

2013-12-30 Thread robinlace
 Jenny Brandis je...@brandis.com.au wrote: 
Are these actually lace bobbins? What would you use them for?


Boy, those are strange!  No way they're lacemaking bobbins, but I have no idea 
what they could be for.  I wonder what that red stuff is poking out of the 
holes in the central one.  That might be a clue to their use.

Robin P.
Los Angeles, California, USA
robinl...@socal.rr.com

Parvum leve mentes capiunt
(Little things amuse little minds)

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Re: [lace] Lace bobbins and types + wonderful book about lacers and lace apparatus in Haute Loire

2010-12-16 Thread Madame RD
Le 15/12/10 13:25, Brian Lemin a écrit :
 a genre of bobbins that are sort of thinnish 
in my group , when we must use a lot of  bobbins filled with thin 
threads  we tend to use thinner bobbins .. for example,middland  bobbins 
without the spangles ..
further more some Le puy carreaux could be very small and the bobbins 
made accordingly . I  have a kid's one with very small bobbins . should  
take pictures ... I know ...

dominique

ps .  I came across a wonderful book with lots of photos or lacers' 
lights and tables used  in Haute Loire .

* *Georges Dubouchet:   les fees aux doigts magiques*. *au Pays de
  la Reine des Montagnes*  .publications du musée de st Didier
  en Velay (haute Loire)


this private museum was  closed in July and the collection  sold to 
someone who should  set it up in a new museum in Seine et Marne , near 
Paris.

you can  order or get information  from :
Genevieve de Fraissinette
Chazel
43140 Saint Didier en Velay
tel: 04 77 35 62 10
http://www.leveil.fr/infos-du-jour/Saint-Didier-en-Velay-3542  Mme de 
fraissinette is the grey haired lady sitting at the table .

the book was issued in June 2010 and cost 65 EUR + postage (10EUR60 for 
France)  . of course it's in French but  it's got so many interesting 
photos I thought it might be of interest to you 
I won't scan nor photocopy the photos  because the money raised  is used 
by M. Dubouchet to publish  new books .

further links  (in french ..)
http://georges.dubouchet.free.fr/museedescampagnes/topic/index.html
about the book :
http://georges.dubouchet.free.fr/museedescampagnes/mapage3/index.html

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins

2008-07-23 Thread Agnes Boddington

Hello Wendy

A lot of things break when dropped.
However, if you think of human bone, it is quite strong, yet wil break 
under certain circumstances.
The same with bone bobbins. Don't drop them on a concrete floor as they 
will break.

Apart from that they are pretty strong.
B.t.w. wood bobbins can break too under similar circumstances.

Agnes Boddington - Elloughton UK
www.sixpennybobbins.co.uk

Wendy Davies wrote:


Hi all

I was told at our last lace day that bone bobbins are very brittle and if
dropped they would break is this true as after reading all of your comments I
would really like to get at least one pair.


 



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RE: [lace] Lace bobbins

2008-07-23 Thread d2oneill
I think cat's tail bobbins must be rosaline bobbins.  They have a small wood 
extension from the bulb at the bottom of the bobbin, handy for sewings.  Cute 
name, very descriptive, I never before heard that  term for those bobbins .   
The ones I have are so smooth, a delight to handle. 

--
Doris O'Neill in Chicago area

-- Original message -- 
From: Karen [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

 What are cat's tail bobbins? 
 Karen in Malta 
 
 -Original Message- 
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 bevw 
 Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 5:40 PM 
 To: Clay Blackwell 
 Cc: Lace 
 Subject: Re: [lace] Lace bobbins 
 
 I think the bone vs. wood (or wood vs. bone to be diplomatic ) informal 
 opinion poll is interesting and yes isn't it wonderful we can have a 
 choice. 
 
 Clay wrote: 
 
  I would love to be able to work with each of those very distinct styles 
  of apparatus, just for the experience. 
  
 
 I have a sort of collection like this - I have enough Spanish bobbins and a 
 large bolster to work a decent (usually Torchon) pattern with them. I even 
 use the 'continental' method (e.g. TC for half-stitch) when I work with 
 them. When I wanted to teach myself Rosaline from a book I invested in the 
 cat's tail bobbins, only 12 bobbins are needed then I got a lot more when I 
 realized how nice they are to work with for other laces. Honiton bobbins and 
 pillow for honiton lace of course when I was dabbling in that. I have lots 
 and lots of spangled midlands, almost all wood or plastic, brought out for 
 Beds or Buckspoint projects. The midlands are shelved for now while I 
 concentrate on Flanders lace and using Flemish-style bobbins for it. 
 
 I'm not into using bone, to handle it gives me the creeps. 
 Ditto when I decided to try an old Buckspoint pricking, still with its 
 eaches (sp), the linen tabs to pin it to the pillow; I rigged a midlands 
 bolster stuffed with straw and hung on antique spangled midlands I'd bought 
 on ebay - the dust of the ages was bothersome! The poor little bobbins had 
 dried out considerably since they were first used, so the authentic 
 experience was not to be had - but it had been fun assembling the components 
 :) 
 
 -- 
 Bev (near Sooke, BC on beautiful Vancouver Island, west coast of Canada) 
 
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Re: [lace] lace bobbins

2008-07-23 Thread robinlace
 Wendy Davies [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
I was told at our last lace day that bone bobbins are very brittle and if
dropped they would break is this true as after reading all of your comments I
would really like to get at least one pair.-


I've got a lot of Midlands spangled bobbins, in metal, wood, bone, and glass.  
So far, I've broken one glass and two wood, but no bone yet.  Not exactly a 
scientific study, but that's the results.

Robin P.
Los Angeles, California, USA

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Re: [lace] Lace bobbins

2008-07-22 Thread Clay Blackwell
I think where bobbins are concerned, it definitely depends on what 
you're doing with them!!  I think there is nothing prettier than a 
lovely pillow (Toustou roller, perhaps?), filled with spangled bobbins 
of every description - plain, painted, spliced, bone, etc.  I also 
belonged to a bone bobbin-of-the-month club for a couple of years, and 
so have a gorgeous collection.  But, sigh, I now find that the spangles 
slow me down, and get in my way.  So my beautiful bobbins are rarely 
used any more.  I have the prettiest on display in glass-domed stands 
which at least allow me to enjoy them.


Instead, I use plain wooden bobbins (rosewood - which has a lovely 
sound), and as I usually have a couple hundred on the pillow, it's still 
a pretty sight...   I still belong to BOMs, but the bobbins I get are 
continentals which are spliced or painted.  They add some bling to the 
pillow without interfering with my work.


So...  as Liz says, we all like something different!  One of my favorite 
books is Kloppel, Kissen, Stander, a lavishly illustrated book on the 
bobbins, pillows, and stands of the many countries (and regions) of the 
world.  I would love to be able to work with each of those very distinct 
styles of apparatus, just for the experience.


Clay

Jean Nathan wrote:
I indulge my liking for bone bobbins by buying them through 
bobbin-a-month. Various bobbins makers have these clubs. I pick 
out and order the 12 I want for the year from the supplier's 
catalogue, and then receive them every two months to save postage, but 
I could have them every month. I also get a bonus one for free at the 
end of the year.




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Re: [lace] Lace bobbins

2008-07-22 Thread bevw
I think the bone vs. wood (or wood vs. bone to be diplomatic g) informal
opinion poll is interesting vbg and yes isn't it wonderful we can have a
choice.

Clay wrote:

   I would love to be able to work with each of those very distinct styles
 of apparatus, just for the experience.


 I have a sort of collection like this - I have enough Spanish bobbins and a
large bolster to work a decent (usually Torchon) pattern with them. I even
use the 'continental' method (e.g. TC for half-stitch) when I work with
them. When I wanted to teach myself Rosaline from a book I invested in the
cat's tail bobbins, only 12 bobbins are needed then I got a lot more when I
realized how nice they are to work with for other laces. Honiton bobbins and
pillow for honiton lace of course when I was dabbling in that. I have lots
and lots of spangled midlands, almost all wood or plastic, brought out for
Beds or Buckspoint projects. The midlands are shelved for  now while I
concentrate on Flanders lace and using Flemish-style bobbins for it.

I'm not into using bone, to handle it gives me the creeps.
Ditto when I decided to try an old Buckspoint pricking, still with its
eaches (sp), the linen tabs to pin it to the pillow; I rigged a midlands
bolster stuffed with straw and hung on antique spangled midlands I'd bought
on ebay - the dust of the ages was bothersome! The poor little bobbins had
dried out considerably since they were first used, so the authentic
experience was not to be had - but it had been fun assembling the components
:)

-- 
Bev (near Sooke, BC on beautiful Vancouver Island, west coast of Canada)

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Re: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-22 Thread David in Ballarat

Dear Daphne,
I'm still waiting for the question

David in Ballarat


Hello Fellow Lacemakers
 My husband asked me to ask all of you this question.
Bone bobbins versus wood bobbins
While a lot of bobbins are turned in hard woods are not so easy to come by.
It takes a lot of time to grow the trees, where`as the bones are easier to
get, because most are cattle bones.
I look forward to your replies.
Daphne Sunny but chilly Norfolk England

[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type image/gif which had a 
name of elephant_en.gif]


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RE: [lace] Lace bobbins

2008-07-22 Thread Karen
What are cat's tail bobbins?
Karen in Malta

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
bevw
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 5:40 PM
To: Clay Blackwell
Cc: Lace
Subject: Re: [lace] Lace bobbins

I think the bone vs. wood (or wood vs. bone to be diplomatic g) informal
opinion poll is interesting vbg and yes isn't it wonderful we can have a
choice.

Clay wrote:

   I would love to be able to work with each of those very distinct styles
 of apparatus, just for the experience.


 I have a sort of collection like this - I have enough Spanish bobbins and a
large bolster to work a decent (usually Torchon) pattern with them. I even
use the 'continental' method (e.g. TC for half-stitch) when I work with
them. When I wanted to teach myself Rosaline from a book I invested in the
cat's tail bobbins, only 12 bobbins are needed then I got a lot more when I
realized how nice they are to work with for other laces. Honiton bobbins and
pillow for honiton lace of course when I was dabbling in that. I have lots
and lots of spangled midlands, almost all wood or plastic, brought out for
Beds or Buckspoint projects. The midlands are shelved for  now while I
concentrate on Flanders lace and using Flemish-style bobbins for it.

I'm not into using bone, to handle it gives me the creeps.
Ditto when I decided to try an old Buckspoint pricking, still with its
eaches (sp), the linen tabs to pin it to the pillow; I rigged a midlands
bolster stuffed with straw and hung on antique spangled midlands I'd bought
on ebay - the dust of the ages was bothersome! The poor little bobbins had
dried out considerably since they were first used, so the authentic
experience was not to be had - but it had been fun assembling the components
:)

-- 
Bev (near Sooke, BC on beautiful Vancouver Island, west coast of Canada)

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Re: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-21 Thread bevw
Hello Daphne and everyone

There are some excellent Q and As at Kenn van Dieren's site:
http://www.bobbinmaker.com/faqbob.html

My quick answer is if bone was nicer to work with than wood, for the bobbin
maker, maybe we'd all be using more bone bobbins than wood bobbins. I prefer
wood though, any time.

On Mon, Jul 21, 2008 at 9:36 AM, Daphne Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


 Bone bobbins versus wood bobbins
 While a lot of bobbins are turned in hard woods are not so easy to come by.
 It takes a lot of time to grow the trees, where`as the bones are easier to
 get, because most are cattle bones.




-- 
Bev (near Sooke, BC on beautiful Vancouver Island, west coast of Canada)

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Re: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-21 Thread Agnes Boddington

This from a lace maker whose husband hand turns both bone and wood bobbins.
He uses hardwood, which is mainly recycled from old furniture, gate 
posts, mantelpieces etc., 
or obtained locally when a tree has fallen in a storm or had to be 
felled because it

was diseased, or obtained via companies that only sell FSC guaranteed wood.
This last one means that the hardwood has been sustainably harvested
(i..e . through necessary thinning or trees/branches that broke in a storm.
I know we have to use our trust here, and of course there are unscrupulous
sellers who'll tell you what you want to hear.
An added problem is that it is illegal to import many endangered 
tropical woods

into the EU, but once inside you are free to trade it.

He uses bone which he buys from another well-known bobbin turner. It is 
mainly camel or
water buffalo bone, as the cows in UK ar now slaughtered before they are 
36 months old,

and the bones are therefore too thin to be used for lace bobbins.
He did obtain some bones locally, cleaned them in the pressure cooker 
with washing powder;

the smell was horrible and the result a few divider pins.
In Victorian times the bones used were mainly horse (from work horses) 
as their bones were longer

and straighter than cow bones, though these were used too.

Agnes Boddington - Elloughton UK
www.sixpennybobbins.co.uk

Daphne Martin wrote:


Hello Fellow Lacemakers
My husband asked me to ask all of you this question.
Bone bobbins versus wood bobbins
While a lot of bobbins are turned in hard woods are not so easy to come by.
It takes a lot of time to grow the trees, where`as the bones are easier to
get, because most are cattle bones.
I look forward to your replies.
Daphne Sunny but chilly Norfolk England

 



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Re: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-21 Thread Alice Howell
This question brought several thoughts to my mind.

Yes, trees take longer to grow than a cow, but there's a lot fewer earth 
resources used in growing a mature speciman.

I understand it's harder or messier to turn bobbins from bone than wood.  There 
must be some reason that bone bobbins are so much more expensive than wood 
bobbins-- either cost/availability of supplies or labor to do it.

Also, how many bobbins can be made from the bones of one cow?  It takes bone of 
a certain thickness and not all the bones qualify.  I may be wrong, but I think 
a person can get more bobbins from one branch of that tree than from an entire 
cow.  Because of the small amount of wood needed for a bobbin, they could be 
made from the scraps created in making larger furniture or limbs from trees cut 
down for other reasons.

For environmental impact and economy, I go with wood bobbins.
Alice in Oregon


- Original Message 
From: Daphne Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: lace lace@arachne.com
Sent: Monday, July 21, 2008 9:36:02 AM
Subject: [lace] lace Bobbins

Hello Fellow Lacemakers
 My husband asked me to ask all of you this question.
Bone bobbins versus wood bobbins
While a lot of bobbins are turned in hard woods are not so easy to come by.
It takes a lot of time to grow the trees, where`as the bones are easier to
get, because most are cattle bones.
I look forward to your replies.
Daphne Sunny but chilly Norfolk England

[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type image/gif which had a name of 
elephant_en.gif]

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Re: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-21 Thread Carol

Hi Daphne, Bev et al,

I do love bone bobbins, but I have heard Steven Pearce talk on making 
bobbins several times, and as he makes only bone bobbins, it is a real 
performance!   He has all sorts of air filters in the garden shed where he 
makes them, and also has a sort of mask-like job to put over his face, so he 
is breathing in purified air rather than bone dust, as that - apparently - 
is dangerous and carcinogenic.


Maybe that explains why bone is generally more expensive, and less easily 
available!


Carol -  in Suffolk UK

- Original Message - 
From: bevw [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: Daphne Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: lace lace@arachne.com
Sent: Monday, July 21, 2008 5:47 PM
Subject: Re: [lace] lace Bobbins



Hello Daphne and everyone

There are some excellent Q and As at Kenn van Dieren's site:
http://www.bobbinmaker.com/faqbob.html

My quick answer is if bone was nicer to work with than wood, for the 
bobbin
maker, maybe we'd all be using more bone bobbins than wood bobbins. I 
prefer

wood though, any time.

On Mon, Jul 21, 2008 at 9:36 AM, Daphne Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:




Bone bobbins versus wood bobbins
While a lot of bobbins are turned in hard woods are not so easy to come 
by.
It takes a lot of time to grow the trees, where`as the bones are easier 
to

get, because most are cattle bones.





--
Bev (near Sooke, BC on beautiful Vancouver Island, west coast of Canada)

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Re: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-21 Thread Laceandbits
And another thing to consider is that the trees absord carbon dioxide while 
they are growing and the carbon remains trapped in our bobbins.  Although there 
is a fair bit of waste in the cutting into blanks and turning , I should 
think that about a quarter to a third of the wood ends up as a bobbin.

Cows give off methane (another greenhouse gas) while they are alive, as does 
any of their remains that end up in landfill, but I don't know what the effect 
on the carbon cycle of preserving a very small percentage of their bone in 
the form of bobbins.

Along with that, I believe that the dust from turning bone bobbins is more 
unpleasant/risky than that from bobbins (although that varies from wood to 
wood, 
as I discussed with Richard Gravestock at length one day.  I think he said 
that the fruitwoods like apple and plum were among the most dangerous) I too go 
with wood, although I do like the feel of a good bone bobbin.

Jacquie in Lincolnshire   

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Re: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-21 Thread Agnes Boddington

Hi Alice and all

To make one bone bobbin takes one cow leg, preferably a hind one as the 
bone is thicker.

Normally the thigh bone is used.
That's why they are so expensive.

Agnes Boddington - Elloughton UK
www.sixpennybobbins.co.uk

Alice Howell wrote:


This question brought several thoughts to my mind.

Yes, trees take longer to grow than a cow, but there's a lot fewer earth 
resources used in growing a mature speciman.

I understand it's harder or messier to turn bobbins from bone than wood.  There 
must be some reason that bone bobbins are so much more expensive than wood 
bobbins-- either cost/availability of supplies or labor to do it.

Also, how many bobbins can be made from the bones of one cow?  It takes bone of a certain thickness and not all the bones qualify.  

 



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Re: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-21 Thread Scotlace
I have also heard Stephen Pearce talk.  If I remember correctly, thanks to 
the new regulations about slaughtering animals younger he can get a maximum of 
4 
bobbins from one leg - if he is lucky.  He buys them from a slaughterhous by 
something like the ton.  He has to get the bone marrow out and gets so much 
that the birds in his vicinity are bored with it :-)  When he has finished with 
a batch of legs he has to pay to have the leftovers taken away.  

I can't remember what he said about his tools but I seem to think they are 
slightly different from those used to turn wood.  

My outstanding memory of his talk is that his bobbins are worth every penny 
he charges - and I thought you probably had to be lightly mad to work with bone 
:-)

Patricia in Wales
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   

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RE: [lace] lace Bobbins

2008-07-21 Thread Sue
Hello Daphne my friend, and all spiders, re bone versus hard wood - I
have been told by John Cooper (bobbin maker at your lace day Daphne)
that the only bones that you can use are the leg bones so that might
make it a little bit harder to get hold of and they take a great deal of
preparation prior to turning.  My own choice would be bone every time
but the cost is usually the deciding factor.

Sue M Harvey
Norfolk UK


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RE: [lace] Lace bobbins on Flog It! revisited

2006-06-25 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- Initial Header ---




 but I like to
see him do that with 60 pairs, or, indeed what does he think Honiton and
Continental lacemakers do?

LOL ...  does he only know we use different bobbins ? ... LOL  experts !! 
dominique from France 

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RE: [lace] Lace bobbins on Flog It! revisited

2006-06-22 Thread C. Johnson
Jean,

It has been a rather serious, busy morning.
I stopped to read your email about the spangles/tracking threads and the
chuckle relieved my tensions...in fact I Ha-Haed out loud.
Thanks, I needed that.

Susie Johnson
Morris, Illinois
Where the sun has finally come out to bless the day!

Jean said

I've just been eating tea while watching a rerun of the Flog It! programme
in which the so-called expert Jethro Marle identified bone bobbins as ivory,
and when this was pointed out to him through emails to the BBC, responded
with I think I know ivory when I see it.

I was obviously so aghast at the time that I didn't notice that he said if
you watch lacemakers, it's very intricate so they use the spangles on the
ends of the bobbins to identify which threads are to be used in which part
of the work! You might be able to track them with about 20 on, but I like to
see him do that with 60 pairs, or, indeed what does he think Honiton and
Continental lacemakers do?

Jean in Poole, Dorset, UK

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Re: [lace] Lace bobbins on Flog It! revisited

2006-06-22 Thread Laceandbits
Don't worry Jean, one of my students spotted that at the first showing and 
wrote an indignant post, covering both the ivory/bone issue and this very false 
idea that a profeesional lacemaker would have either the need or the time to 
be looking at the spangles.  

She got a slightly less condecending reply than you did; maybe by then they'd 
had several comments and realised that perhaps we knew more than the expert.

Jacquie

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RE: [lace] lace bobbins in Radio Times

2005-11-22 Thread C. Johnson
Please tell us what was stated as the reason for no spangles on Honiton
Bobbins.  I am dying of curiosity.
Thanks
Susie Johnson
Morris, IL.

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
The Browns
Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2005 8:39 AM
To: lace@arachne.com
Subject: [lace] lace bobbins in Radio Times


This is especially for British lacemakers.  Have you bought next week's
copy?   On page 34, there is a piece on lace bobbins. His valuations are
a little low, especially the hanging bobbin.But look at his reason for
no spangles on Honiton bobbins.   As with 'Flog it' they should check
their facts.
Sheila in a new sunny Sawbo'.
www,lace-helpandhistory.info

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins in Radio Times

2005-11-22 Thread bevw
On 11/22/05, Jenny Barron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 apparently the honiton bobbins needed to pass through the fabric!

LOL,
if a single thread can be defined as 'fabric' (?) they're close (but
no prizewinner)
g


--
bye for now
Bev in Sooke BC (on Vancouver Island, west coast of Canada)
Cdn. floral bobbins
www.woodhavenbobbins.com

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Re: [lace] lace bobbins in Radio Times

2005-11-22 Thread robinlace
Well, that sounds like they may have checked their facts, but 
misunderstood the answer.

Robin P.
Los Angeles, California, USA
(formerly  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

- Original Message -
 On 11/22/05, Jenny Barron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  apparently the honiton bobbins needed to pass through the fabric!
 
From: bevw [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 LOL,
 if a single thread can be defined as 'fabric' (?) they're close (but
 no prizewinner)
 g

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