Re: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-10 Thread C. de la Guardia
Other thing used are little nylon bags full of holes, with a ribbon on the top that slips inside a plastic piece. When you press the button of the plastic piece, pulling the ribbon at the same time, the bag closes, (difficult to explain for me in English). These bags come into soap powder

RE: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-10 Thread J. Falkink
I guess much depends on how exact you want your bobbins to stay in order, or don't mind to untwist a few. On the details of the congne page you see how they don't mind too much. I saw them working this way. They just touch the bobbins looking at their work to see which thread moves and thus know

Re: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-10 Thread Sue Babbs
http://www.dentellieres.com/Musee/Cogne/cogne2.htm And if you look at the lace on the bolster pillow, they have no pricking and are just working freehand torchon lace with pins only on the outside edge, with impressive tension! Sue Babbs - To unsubscribe send email to

Re: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-09 Thread David in Ballarat
Dear Clay, Not everyone works with spangled bobbins. I have to say, those spangles come in handy for keeping the bobbins in order, but I rarely use this kind of bobbin. Continental bobbins present their own set of challenges. My favorite system (which I have not come even *close* to

Re: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-09 Thread robinlace
David in Ballarat d.collye...@aapt.net.au wrote: I have to say I've often wondering just how Continental bobbins are kept in any sort of order without any spangles to thread on things.- Other things used with continentals are: knitted/crocheted strips with holes to poke the bobbin

Re: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-08 Thread David in Ballarat
Dear Margot, I've tried that and it didn't work for me. What I've made are like giant safety pins - 2 from each plastic coated coat hanger cut in half. Each of these will hold about 32 bobbins, but we are talking close to 400 bobbins here. I did try that method where I threaded a hundred or

RE: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-08 Thread Cher
To: Margot Walker; ARACHNE Subject: Re: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal Dear Margot, I've tried that and it didn't work for me. What I've made are like giant safety pins - 2 from each plastic coated coat hanger cut in half. Each of these will hold about 32 bobbins, but we are talking

Re: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-08 Thread Clay Blackwell
I've been told that one of the things that separates *really* good lacemakers from *merely* good lacemakers is their ability to manage huge numbers of bobbins. And to a small extent, this can't be learned from a book or from a set of rules... every piece which requires hundreds of bobbins

Re: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-08 Thread robinlace
David in Ballarat d.collye...@aapt.net.au wrote: I've tried that and it didn't work for me. I did try that method where I threaded a hundred or so onto one long piece of electric wire, but they didn't come off easily enough. -- An option I find useful with spangled bobbins is a short

RE: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-07 Thread Sue
Sounds like a great idea David, so come on all you folk who have been brave enough to tackle it lets see how much variation in techniques have been achieved. Sue M Harvey Norfolk UK Where I have been to our laceday today and bought some absolutely lovely imitation silk threads in beautiful

RE: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal

2009-03-07 Thread Daphne Martin
: RE: [lace] Miss Channer receives a Proposal Date: Sat, 7 Mar 2009 21:46:25 + Sounds like a great idea David, so come on all you folk who have been brave enough to tackle it lets see how much variation in techniques have been achieved. Sue M Harvey Norfolk UK Where I have been to our