[lace] Mullers for handmade lace?

2005-08-29 Thread Jenny Hester
Hello all, Coming out of lurkdom to ask what you all think that these mullers are? I have found these on eBay uk http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=7344793903sspagename=AD ME:L:RTQ:UK:1 I sent a question to the seller to ask how they were used, and the reply was muller is

Re: [lace] Mullers for handmade lace?

2005-08-29 Thread Jenny Hester
29, 2005 12:27 PM Subject: Re: [lace] Mullers for handmade lace? I think this seller needs to double check the definition for Muller - The Glass Muller is used for grinding pigment and dispersing the pigment into an oil or water base. It is used on an even grinding surface such as glass

Re: [lace] Mullers for handmade lace?

2005-08-29 Thread Brian Lemin
Sent: Monday, August 29, 2005 12:27 PM Subject: Re: [lace] Mullers for handmade lace? I think this seller needs to double check the definition for Muller - The Glass Muller is used for grinding pigment and dispersing the pigment into an oil or water base. It is used on an even grinding surface

Re: [lace] Mullers for handmade lace?

2005-08-29 Thread Ilske Thomsen
Hello Jenny, I haven't any idea how these could be useful for lacemaking. I used such glass-things working in my profession as Chemotechnikerin, to stir into glasses for christals or mixing or works like that. Greetings Ilske - To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the

Re: [lace] Mullers for handmade lace?

2005-08-29 Thread Jeriames
In a message dated 8/29/05 8:25:40 AM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: I had a reply to the question of which reference book that they had used. Quote The information we gave you comes from a book called The Antiques Care and Repair Handbook by Albert Jackson David Day on

[lace] Mullers for handmade lace?

2005-08-29 Thread Jane Partridge
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes involves twisting and plaiting up to 200 bobbins around each other and around a pattern of pins in the lace-making pillow. (Sigh!) The inaccurate bad description of the bobbin lace technique - again! Yes, but I was pulled up