Sadly, my dear Euphoria is nekked inside a plastic bag (the very
thought!!). There she is likely to stay until I need the next costume
piece. And she'll need a retrofit to fit me!
Printing museum is the International Printing Museum in Carson, CA (www.printmuseum.org
).
We don't "do" any particular period-- but we have a couple of re-
enactors/aka actors who portray Dickens, Franklin, and Jeffereson.
I have one apron which I designed to wear with historic clothing, but
for the most part, when I volunteer, it's _not_ a historical day, just
a regular volunteer day which involves sorting type, printing, or
crawling around looking for machine serial numbers. Or just dusting!
I have to miss this year's Christmas event (Dickens), because I will
be 300 miles north with my printing guild up there. Too many events,
and I've yet to clone myself <sigh>.
Now, if I could just FIND my corset. . . it gets so little use these
past few years.
== Marjorie Wilser
=:=:=:Three Toad Press:=:=:=
"Learn to laugh at yourself and you will never lack for amusement." --MW
http://3toad.blogspot.com/
On Dec 3, 2010, at 5:11 PM, Carol Kocian wrote:
Yes, that's exactly what I need them for, computing in a cold room.
Tipless gloves? :-)
I'm sure we could wear regular gloves, but then our fingers might
slide and cause (more) typos. Considering the gloves I find often
are too short in the finger, cutting off the very tip would still
fit down more on the hand.
I suppose there are mitts and fingerless mitts (with a hole that all
four fingers go through).
The printing museum sounds awesome! What era? Do you have a
collection of aprons to keep the ink off your clothes?
-Carol
On Dec 3, 2010, at 7:43 PM, Lynn Downward wrote:
I've been wearing cheap gloves with the finger tips cut off in my
office for
the past week because of the cold. My office doesn't have much heat
and it's
been real work just to type on my computer. I've been finding
excuses to get
up and walk around the building just to get my blood circulating.
thank goodness for mittens/mitts/fingerless mittens, whatever we
call them!
LynnD
On Fri, Dec 3, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Marjorie Wilser
<the3t...@gmail.com> wrote:
Ann,
I don't think there's any differentiation in the "mitts" category.
Though
fingerless handwear in general seems to be mittens OR mitts. But
it all
depends on what century and what decade of the century.
Makes me want to take my mitts tomorrow to work at the printing
museum.
Sometimes equipment rooms are downright chilly, especially if they
don't
boast a Linotype in residence!
== Marjorie Wilser
=:=:=:Three Toad Press:=:=:=
"Learn to laugh at yourself and you will never lack for
amusement." --MW
http://3toad.blogspot.com/
On Dec 3, 2010, at 4:16 PM, annbw...@aol.com wrote:
In a message dated 12/3/2010 4:39:09 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
aqua...@patriot.net writes:
What is the item called when the fingers are also
differentiated? Usually I see them ending just before the knuckle,
but I'm thinking about making some that would only have an open
fingertip. I'm sure I could just adapt a glove pattern for that,
but
I'm just curious if there is a name for it.
I believe they are also "mitts," but not "fingerless."
Ann Wass
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