Hi All,
I have a Christine Mirecki - Mailander Srtze, Modern Interpreiert - which I
purchased from Barbara Fay. On the back page it lists some of her books, and
the five hat patterns seem to be just that, individual patterns, all in
Milanese technique. They are - Sommerhute, Hut Beatrice, Hut Ke
Karen, Christine Mirecki has designed lots of hats - her Sommerhüte more or
less fits what you're looking for, with twelve different designs.
I was going to make one for my niece's wedding but was then told hats are
only for the mothers, so made a fascinator, but thank you for reminding me
- I ca
In a message dated 2/21/2019 1:33:07 PM Eastern Standard Time,
linhud...@gmail.com writes:
As a kid, i knew this as a God's eye.  Lin and the Mali
A 1972 book, Ojo de Dios - Eye of God, was written by Charlet Albaum.Â
Available on Amazon as a used book. Please search to see a photo.Â
Consi
Jeri has sent me this information to share with arachne about an exhibit of
interest:
Notice of an exhibit in England about royal fashions, with a lace component
that might be of interest. http://bit.ly/2U2j95d
Publicity by the museum: https://www.fashionmuseum.co.uk/events/royal-women
Devon
After a few hours sleep, I went back to Russian Lace Making - because I
requested a photo of this Kopek stitch in a finished lace. You'll see it
first in the Patterns chapter on page 28 - a completed window decoration lace
Bridget Cook named Nicholas, with a full pricking of that item 2 pages
lat
I watched it on YouTube with the slides - really interesting. Thank you so much
for posting, Veronika.
Adele
West Vancouver, BC
(west coast of Canada)
> Textile historian Angharad Rixon has posted a talk, with slides, about
> the use of non-linen threads in 17th century needle lace:
>
> https:
Woven spiders web is an embroidery term where a single thread is either
woven under and over all the way around, or alternatively goes forward under
two bars then doubles back to go back over the one it just came under and
the next one ie two bars forward, one back back all the time, with all
Textile historian Angharad Rixon has posted a talk, with slides, about
the use of non-linen threads in 17th century needle lace:
https://www.textilesupport.net/single-post/2019/02/20/Whats-in-a-Thread
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GbFkj5_HG34&feature=youtu.be
Regards,
Veronika
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>
> Jeri wrote:
> The one illustration shows 8 spokes reaching outward from the center. It
> does not illustrate how spokes are anchored at the perimeter. Then, it
> looks like a first stitch comes up in the center, goes over a spoke, then
> is taken back under that spoke and brought up and forwa
Hi Susan,
Thank you for your lovely comments but I do have to say the pendant isn't
mine ( I have just realised that I didn't label it correctly on Flickr - I
was so confused by trying to upload the pictures that I forgot to credit
them properly, I will do that at lunchtime when I can get away wit
You are confused, Clare? Me too!
Do we have any Russian Lace experts? If you are shy about writing to the
list, please write to me. We would like to know what books/authors have
included Kopek/Whirlpool fillings as content. We'd like to see actual photos
and other instructions for it. So
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