Naturally, when I make an absolute statement, it doesn't take long for me to 
contradict myself!!  Jean Nathan mentioned Jane Atkinson's book on disk, and 
this is a good example.  I did not "discover" Jean's book until it was OOP, and 
so was thrilled to learn about the CD.  As soon as I got it, I spent lots of 
time looking at it.  The beauty of Jane's book on disk is that the images are 
extremely in high definition, and all in color, so that if you want a closer 
look, all you have to do is enlarge the image on your screen with no 
pixillation until you get very, very close.  This was just a revelation for me! 
 I loved being able to do that in a lace-related book.

But...  because I do prefer to curl up with a book, I took the time to print 
out Jane's book, which I then comb-bound, including a pocket for the CD.  Now, 
it's possible to curl up with the book, read to my heart's content, and when I 
want a better look, take the CD to the computer.

So I don't feel deprived for not having gotten one of the original "hard 
copies" of the book!  (And it is a great one!)

Clay

--
Clay Blackwell 
Lynchburg, VA USA 


-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "Jean Nathan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

> Don't know why this is on both Lace and Lace-chat, as it's clearly a lace 
> topic, so I'm restricting my reply to Lace to save getting it twice. 
> 
> A book every time! 
> 
> I had a choice of Jane Akinson's book "Pattern Design for Torchon Lace" new 
> on CD or secondhand in book form - I chose the book. Price had nothing to do 
> with the choice. Books are much easier to peruse at leisure and almost at 
> any time, anywhere. I also find I can usually remember which book I saw a 
> pattern in and can go to that book immediately, but I canlt do that with 
> CDs. 

-
To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the line:
unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to