Thank you Jenny for the list of lacemaking links.
Just spent an enjoyable hour going through them all and have bookmarked many
to return to when I have more time.
Ann
Yorkshire UK
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Dear Jenny,
Thank you for introducing my web site.
As my website is written in only Japanese, I am very surprised to know
people from Australia access to my site !!!
English Lace Club in Japan
http://value.zero.ad.jp/~zav12659/blgallery2.htm
Language: Japanese
I have two more pages which
Having looked at the Arachne Lace Bookmark Exchange on Jenny's list, and
being absolutely gobsmacked at the fantastic bookmarks, how does one get
copies of some of the patterns. My FIL is a celtic art expert and taught it
for years. He still does alot of research as well as make gifts with a
I feel a bit of a fool - thought I had saved the site for the leaves, which
showed in clear detail step by step, a method of making them. Please could
someone let me have the address again. Sorry to trouble you, but it was a
very clear description. I have made leaves in the 'English' manner (on
At 06:20 PM 7/11/2006, you wrote:
On Nov 5, 2006, at 23:50, David in Ballarat wrote:
At 08:21 AM 6/11/2006, you wrote:
Because guns are mens bussines and textiles womans bussines. Men
do take themselves and their thiongs veeery serious. The world
would be too small if woman would take their
David,
It is good to see the men who diversify too. I have a fabulous embroidered
picture hanging on my wall, a gift to my husband and I from a work college
(a man).
I often used to get roped in to help with fixing our car, putting up sheds.
Not so capable anymore but my hsbnd and I still
So David learned to knit.
My father taught me to knit, crochet and sew, and he taught my sisters too.
Being an old-fashioned army man, they were taught to mend their own
socks, sew on buttons etc.
My husband, on the contrary, is hopeless in this field, and so I became
my children's teacher.
Nope, Your dad is not alone. My boyfriend crochets a bit. Enough that
when we went to the grand opening of a yarn shop in our area he took
the mini-class on crochet flowers. He was the only man in the group
and surprised the instructor when she realized that he was working
right along with the
Jenny -
what a star you are, but now I'll never ever finish all though UFOs,
'cause I'll be too busy surfing the lace websites.
Seriously thank you for all that work
Rosemary
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Hi everyone
I'm translating the text to the final pattern in the Cluny de Brioude book
-the collar and cuffs- and I've come across three terms which neither the
international lace dictionary, my (very large) French-English dictionary nor
the Petit Larousse Illustre gives me any help with. Can
I do know one answer. Passee a cheval is the cluny method of joining a
plait to a cloth trail. One pair becomes the worker and one pair
becomes a passive.
Patty
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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of beth
Sent: Tuesday, November 07, 2006 1:39
Thank you, Katrina, Patricia and Carolina
Now all I need to do is type up my translation...
Beth
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