The roller pillow I've got isn't very fancy and the method used to hold the
roller in place is a smaller wooden wedge. You just insert it between the
roller and the side of the hole it sits in. It holds well enough so I'd
think having even a really small one on each side would hold a roller in
place without difficulty. 

Darlene Mulholland 


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From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
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Sent: March 30, 2004 7:08 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [lace] Holding the roller


When I had a very basic roller pillow with no satisfactory anchor to 
stabilise the roller I found the most effective way to hold it was by using
a piece of 
tape or ribbon over the top of each end of the roller with the front ends 
pinned into the pillow near the roller (they are mainly needed to keep the
roller 
down into the box, but also so you don't have to put "weight-bearing pins" 
into the roller), and have longer ends at the back pinned low down on the
pillow 
with the pin at angled so the point is higher than the head.  It is the pins

at the back that do the work; they are holding both the constant weight of
the 
bobbins and the extra pull when you are working .  I then put a pin through 
the tape at the top of the roller.  To turn the roller this was the only pin

that needed to be moved.

As I said before, it is the back edge of the roller that needs to be held 
firmly but I found that if I tried to hold the roller in place with a pin or
tape 
just from the back of the roller to the pillow, it damaged the roller
because 
you are pulling hard against it.

I think you said that your pillow has a hole but the roller is now too wide 
to fit in it.   If you over-fill the hole with something soft like wadding
and 
pin a cloth loosely over the top then you will be able to seat the bottom 
curve of the roller into the stuffing, so it doesn't move around much.

If I am mistaken about the hole, the same principle should work but I would 
make two firm "sausages" and pin them to the pillow first, to make a groove
for 
the roller to sit into so it is more secure.  If you are using the whole 
width of the roller to work on (which I assume you are otherwise you
wouldn't need 
such a wide one <VBG>) then you could have 3 or 4 tapes and remove them as 
needed so they are not across the bit of pillow you are using.  The pins
will 
probably be far enough apart to allow the tape to go between them.

I hope some of these ideas are of help to you.
Jacquie

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