Re: [lace] Help please.

2015-10-30 Thread Brenda Paternoster
Hi Julie

It looks like Point de Gaze, but not detailed enough to be certain that it’s
all needle lace with no bobbin fillings to make it mixed Brussels.  A very
nice piece of lace.

Brenda
>
> Sorry, here is the photo of the lace.
>
> http://tinyurl.com/whatlaceisthis
>

Brenda in Allhallows
paternos...@appleshack.com
www.brendapaternoster.co.uk

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RE: [lace] Help, Please!

2014-03-26 Thread Gray, Alison J
Hi Carol

I don't suppose that this is going to be much help to your friend but I'm sure 
that there is a pattern for a windmill in one of Veronica Sorensen's books.  
Definitely not the Bruges flower lace, but one of the others, I can't remember 
which and am at work at the moment so can't check.  This windmill is 3D so it 
may not be of any help but I think it's based on the smock windmill in 
Upminster in what now passes for Greater London, but when I lived a few hundred 
yards from the mill in the 1960s/70s was part of Essex.

Alison in Colchester, Essex, UK and, at last, the sun has come out on a grey day


I am hoping that you can help me! A lace-making friend was hit by the North 
Sea Surge in December last, and her house is till full of sand and sea-water, 
as well as other impossible things, but she - and others in the same situation 
- has had a great deal of help from the local publican, whose inn is called 
'The Lighthouse'.   As a small thank-you gesture, she would like to make him a 
small picture of a lighthouse, but so far none of us can find a pricking.    So 
- if anyone can eMail me a pricking, or tell me where to source one, I would be 
cery grateful indeed.   The other possibility is a pricking/pattern for a 
windmill - the sais could be the beams of the lamps, so if anyone has anything 
remotely suuitable, do please let me know.
 

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Re: [lace] Help, Please!

2014-03-26 Thread Joke Sinclair
Hello Carol,

I will send you some scans from a Dutch magazine Kant Kwartaal published by 
Jolanda de Boer-van Nes in 1993.  It is a pattern of a stylised lighthouse in 
waves.


Joke Sinclair in wet West-Sussex



On 26 Mar 2014, at 14:59, nestalace.ca...@btinternet.com wrote:

 Hi Spiders All,
  
 I am hoping that you can help me! A lace-making friend was hit by the 
 North Sea Surge in December last, and her house is till full of sand and 
 sea-water, as well as other impossible things, but she - and others in the 
 same situation - has had a great deal of help from the local publican, whose 
 inn is called 'The Lighthouse'.   As a small thank-you gesture, she would 
 like to make him a small picture of a lighthouse, but so far none of us can 
 find a pricking.So - if anyone can eMail me a pricking, or tell me where 
 to source one, I would be cery grateful indeed.   The other possibility is a 
 pricking/pattern for a windmill - the sais could be the beams of the lamps, 
 so if anyone has anything remotely suuitable, do please let me know.
  
 I know I can rely on you all, and thank you all very much indeed in advance.
  
 Carol - in North Norfolk, UK
 'Deliver us, Lord, from every evil, and grant us peace in our day.'
 
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RE: [lace] Help, Please!

2014-03-26 Thread Agnes Boddington
I have actually seen a bobbin lace pattern for a lighthouse, but cannot
remember where or when.
Possibly in a German publication or pattern.
However, if you search for lace light house, some pictures of crocheted ones
come up, and you may be able to convert these simple designs to a lace
pattern in Torchon.
Sorry, I am not much help.
Agnes Boddington - Elloughton UK

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Re: [lace] Help, Please!

2014-03-26 Thread Sue
To help all in the future I  found one in the Modern Lace designs book by 
Veronica Sorenson.  It is a free standing model but might lend itself to 
reduction or adaption if needed.


Sue T
Dorset UK

I have actually seen a bobbin lace pattern for a lighthouse, but cannot
remember where or when.
Possibly in a German publication or pattern.
However, if you search for lace light house, some pictures of crocheted ones
come up, and you may be able to convert these simple designs to a lace
pattern in Torchon.
Agnes Boddington - Elloughton UK

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Re: [lace] Help, Please!

2014-03-26 Thread Maureen
Hi all

Page 125 of Veronica Sorenson's Modern Lace Designs has a windmill, but it is a 
3D model to be used as a table light, but you may be able to do something with 
it.

Regards 
Maureen
E Yorkshire

 
 

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Re: [lace] Help, Please!

2014-03-26 Thread Brenda Paternoster
Rendas de Bilros de Peniche/Bobbin lace of Peniche from Barbara Fay
http://www.barbara-fay.de/j2/index.php/en/component/virtuemart/bobbin-lace/kl%C3%B6ppelspitzen-aus-peniche-detail?Itemid=0
has a pricking or the watch tower shown on the cover.  If you can draw, or 
trace, a picture of a lighthouse you should be able to produce something 
similar as it's essentially cloth stitch outlines with not-difficult fillings.

Search Google images for 'lighthouse lace' and there are several examples of 
machine lace with lighthouses which could be used for inspiration.

Brenda

On 26 Mar 2014, at 14:59, nestalace.ca...@btinternet.com wrote:

 whose inn is called 'The Lighthouse'.   As a small thank-you gesture, she 
 would like to make him a small picture of a lighthouse, but so far none of us 
 can find a pricking.  

Brenda in Allhallows
www.brendapaternoster.co.uk

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Re: [lace] Help Please with Italian translation

2012-06-14 Thread Sister Claire
It looks like a typo to me: pRotesti instead of potesti. It would mean:
Could you please send me the (design/pattern), how much does it cost?

Sr. Claire in Jerusalem

On Thu, Jun 14, 2012 at 7:32 PM, Kathy Hensel kathhen...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Dear Lacemakers-
 I have received a message from someone about a lace pattern on Facebook but
 cannot get a satisfatory translation from any of the several translators
 online. Can any of you who speak Italian please help?
 This lady's message reads: MI PROTESTI SPEDIRE IL DISEGNO PER FAVORE
 ,QUANTO
 COSTA.  Salve ,uno qualsiasi sono una principiante .possibilmente non
 tondo.parlo di un disegno a tombolo.

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Re: [lace] Help Please

2008-12-24 Thread Beth Marshall
Good luck with your Incy Wincy Spider, Nancy

Support pins are pins set back a little way from the first row of stitches - 
you hang the pairs on support pins while you work the first pinhole(s) using  
those pairs, then take the support pins out and tension gently to get the 
threads neatly round the first real pins in the lace.

How obvious it is where you need to add the pairs depends on the type of lace 
and the shape of the piece you're making (I haven't seen Incy Wincy Spider). A 
lot of torchon patterns start along either a single diagonal line or an 
inverted V shape - for those, as you move out/down from the start point you 
just add another pair at each pinhole (it's pretty obvious because you need 
the new pair to make the stitch round the pinhole).

Hope that helps a little - if you've worked a similar shape/type lace before, 
have a look at the starting instructions from that and see if you can use 
those to help you identify where/how you need to bring in pairs for your new 
piece.

It's always daunting starting your first new piece without instructions, but 
you'll learn loads from doing it.

Beth
In comparatively mild Cheshire, NW England, finding excuses not to get on 
with present-wrapping, mince-pie making and so on.

On Wednesday 24 December 2008, Nancy Nicholson wrote:
 I have just bought a pattern called Incy Wincy Spider.  I bought it because
 it was advertised as being ideal for a first big project and thought it was
 a good idea.  On getting the pattern I am only shown where to put the first
 two pairs of bobbins (there are 34 pairs altogether) and I am to add the
 pairs using support pins.  What are support pins?  Will it be obvious where
 to add in the pairs?

 If I manage this it will be my first piece not following instructions from
 a book so I was looking forward to giving it a go but now am not so sure.


 Nancy

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Re: [lace] Help, please

2007-11-20 Thread Jenny Brandis

Hi Helene

Could it possible be a triangle ground stitch?

Jenny B in warm and sunny Kununurra

At 05:20 AM 20/11/2007, Helene Ulrich wrote:

Hi,

  I seem to be suffering from a major case of brain drain.  There 
is a symbol on the pattern I am starting and for the life of me, I 
cannot remember what it stands for.


  It sort of looks like ( only they are on top of each other.

  Could someone please remind me what it means.

  Thanks all,

  Helene Ulrich
  Surfside Beach, SC, USA


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Jenny Brandis
Kununurra, Western Australia

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www.brandis.com.au/craft/lace/index.html

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Re: [lace] Help, please

2007-11-20 Thread Helene Ulrich
Seems I made an error in my previous help request -- the acutal symbol has two 
() with the  on top of it.  Still can't remember the name of the stitch it 
represents, but finally figured out how to work the stitch.
   
  Hopefully I interpreted it correctly.
   
  Thanks for the help.
   
  Helene Ulrich
  Surfside Beach, SC
   
   
   
   
  Jenny Brandis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Hi Helene

Could it possible be a triangle ground stitch?

Jenny B in warm and sunny Kununurra

At 05:20 AM 20/11/2007, Helene Ulrich wrote:
Hi,

 I seem to be suffering from a major case of brain drain. There 
 is a symbol on the pattern I am starting and for the life of me, I 
 cannot remember what it stands for.

 It sort of looks like ( only they are on top of each other.

 Could someone please remind me what it means.

 Thanks all,

 Helene Ulrich
 Surfside Beach, SC, USA


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11/18/2007 5:15 PM

Jenny Brandis
Kununurra, Western Australia

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.brandis.com.au/craft/lace/index.html

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Re: [lace] help please

2007-08-29 Thread Sue Babbs
Mouline is the same as Anchor or DMC stranded embroidery threads. If you are 
using all 6 strands it is probably the gimp in the pattern.


perigarn rings a bell, but not loudly enough for me to recall it!!! I can't 
easily track it down in Brenda's book either.


How recent is the pattern? I have many of the earlier copies of Lace Express 
and can look at the pattern if you tell me volume and page nos. and see if I 
can help from there
Sue 


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Re: [lace] Help please

2006-10-12 Thread Brenda Paternoster

Hello Ann
Yes, use the Bruges pivot pin method.

The first time you work that pinhole in the usual way (by working 
through the last passive in cloth stitch, twist the workers and stick 
the pin).  On the next and subsequent times you come to that pin work 
until the last pair of passives, twist the worker pair and wrap the 
worker pair behind the pin, over and under the passive pair and 
continue.  The wraps of thread from the worker pair will stack up on 
the pin.  As soon as you've finished that pinhole and got one or two 
more pins stuck remove the pivot pin and tension gently.  The stack of 
threads should then all lie down close to each other.


If you work with the footedge on the right, English fashion, you will 
wrap clockwise, if it's on the left, continental fashion, you will wrap 
anti-clockwise.


Brenda

I am working a piece of lace that on a corner needs one of the inner 
pins to be  worked into at least six or seven times. As this is more 
times than I would normally use one pin hole does anyone know of a 
neat way of doing this to avoid bulkiness or holes.



Brenda
http://paternoster.orpheusweb.co.uk/

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