I totally agree with Clay. I have known Alex for many years now and her
ability to teach and explain lace techniques does not decrease. She has
taught me all types of lace over the years and yet I still find the need to
attend her workshops when I can. If I lived closer to her I am
Hello all,
I was reading some books about Bucks point lace and found the
expression setting a pattern in.
What does that mean?
Currently, I'm practising gimp-work, learning to work with passive
pairs on headside scallops and valleys, and square tallies in tulle
ground... Fun!
Cheers,
Debora
Hi Debora -
I'm fascinated... I've never heard this expression before. Could you
tell us which author used it, in which book, and in what context? That
might make it easier to figure out.
Clay
Clay Blackwell
Lynchburg, VA USA
Debora Lustgarten wrote:
Hello all,
I was reading some
, September 30, 2009 5:18:53 PM
Subject: Re:
[lace] Lace terminology
Hi Debora -
I'm fascinated... I've never heard this
expression before. Could you tell us which author used it, in which book, and
in what context? That might make it easier to figure out.
Clay
Clay
Blackwell
Lynchburg, VA USA
To Clay, Debora and list
I happened to have a copy of the booklet Lacemaking - Point Ground by CC
Channer (The Dryad Press) - page 21, To Wind Bobbins and Set in a Pattern
- describes the winding of the bobbins, then how-to to begin learning bobbin
lace but doesn't describe per se what 'set in a
AM
To: lace@arachne.com
Subject: [lace] Lace terminology
Hello all,
I was reading some books about Bucks point lace and found the
expression setting a pattern in.
What does that mean?
Currently, I'm practising gimp-work, learning to work with passive
pairs on headside scallops and valleys
It's an old expression which means starting to work the pattern or
getting it established on the pillow.
On 30 Sep 2009, at 20:41, Debora Lustgarten wrote:
I was reading some books about Bucks point lace and found the
expression setting a pattern in.
What does that mean?
Brenda in
Hi Debora -
I have one excellent suggestion. Alex Stillwell has been studying Bucks
Point lace for many years, and to her surprise, most of the books she
had seen in the past were referencing only the much older books about
Bucks. So, she set out to really study Bucks Point and to examine
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Diana Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes
Another *mistake* is she mentions Nottinghamshire
Not necessarily. In the histories of the machine lace industry
(Nottingham in particular) there is mention that John Heathcote watched
the natural movements of the hand
Adele said
In Gabrielle Pond's book An Introduction to Lace she refers to
Bedfordshire as a Torchon lace.
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4
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must be serendipity but there are 2
Torchon was being made in the East Midlands at that time but 'Torchon
Bedfordshire' I don't know and I'm not sure about the 'Buckinghamshire
spider pattern bobbin lace' either!
Another *mistake* is she mentions Nottinghamshire when I'm sure she must
have been referring to Northamptonshire, a
Jenny wrote:
In Gabrielle Pond's book An Introduction to Lace she refers to
Bedfordshire as a Torchon lace.
Yes, um, ... that's the book I was quoting from. I just wondered if
everybody else did too or if it was just her. Since I wrote that
message I read a little in Emily Jackson's Old
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