Alex said: I donât mind friends sharing or teachers supplying my patterns
at
no cost, Thank you Alex!
A friend and I have subscriptions to different lace publications, but both
of us, if we see something in the other's publication, order our own copy
of that particular number. My problem is
Alex et al.,
I realize that copyright has been discussed before on Arachne, but I think
it's important that someone respond to Alex's initial statement. I agree
with you that once you give out a pattern, you have (almost) no control
over who copies it, but it is NOT in the public domain, at least
I so agree Alex. I Have always been willing to share anything I design, just
give me the credit for the original.
Maureen
E Yorks UK
where it is wall to wall sunshine.
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Hi Kim
I agree with you.
Once you give out a pattern it is in the public domain and you have no control
over who copies it. If you wish to keep it to yourself donât give anyone the
pattern. I donât mind friends sharing or teachers supplying my patterns at
no cost, (please do not pass on the
Tracing and drawing are fine if your hands do what you want them to do. Mine
don't now and it's very frustrating. Threading needle is difficult enough
even with one of those wire thingies that you put trough the eye and pull the
thread through, but getting a dot or a line (and a straight line) on
Hello all,
This is my first foray into Arachne.
I've been following the thread about making prickings from copies too dark
to photocopy. If the pattern is fairly small and simple, I have been known
to use tracing paper - in the U.S., this is a thin, tissue-like paper that
is translucent. Placing