There is a hardcover listing on Borders.com for $48.60.  The listing is
sketchy so I'm not sure if they have it in stock yet.

Judy
in rainy Burnside on the Mississippi
 -------------- Original message from [EMAIL PROTECTED]: --------------


> Dear Lace-in-Fashion Lovers,
>
> Oh!!!!  What a pleasure to be the first to write to you about this  book!
> It just arrived (via special order), and I cannot concentrate  on anything
else
> but devouring the information within its covers.  If  this type of book is
> your idea of dessert, you *must* tell your  personal Santa it is what you
want
> for Christmas.  If that is not possible,  try to order from your public
library.  Most likely, it will not be in  a small library, so ask about
> alternatives
> like Interlibrary Loan (or the name  for this loan program in your
country).
>
> Janet Arnold unexpectedly died 10 years ago.  She had begun to  work on this
> book, now completed by her friends Jenny Tiramani and Santina M.  Levey.
>
> Janet Arnold's "Patterns of Fashion 4 -- The cut and construction of linen
> shirts, smocks, neckwear, headwear and accessories for men and women C.
> 1540-1660"
> ISBN 978-0-333-57082-1   2008
> Pub. by Macmillan  _www.panmacmillan.com_ (http://www.panmacmillan.com)
> UK book jacket price is 30 pounds
> US price I paid was $50.51, including taxes and S/H
> 128 pages - photos in color, except those only available in B/W.
> Size 14 1/2" x 10 1/2"
> Soft cover, unfortunately.  It will get knocked around, and size makes  it
> inevitable there will be premature damage to the book.  Hard cover would  be
> preferred for the scholarly audience interested in this material.
>
> Macmillan has not mentioned Santina M. Levey on their website, also
> unfortunately.  But, her name is on the cover.
>
> A few years ago, Ms. Levey spoke at a special museum event in  Virginia,
USA,
> that I attended.  She hinted that she would be working on  the late Janet
> Arnold's incomplete research.  Co-author, Jenny  Tiramani, is a costumer who
> worked in the Wardrobe during the recreation of  Shakespeare's Globe
Theatre.
>
> I like the way the cross-references are handled, making it easier to follow
> the text and all about an item.  Every item of clothing has been given a
> number, and that number is attached to the pattern, drawings and photographs
of
> the item.  The close-up photography is wonderful.  (I wish there was  this
> level of photography in Arnold's greatest book: "Queen Elizabeth's Wardrobe
> Unlock'd".)
>
> The information about starching and setting lace ruffs answers lots of
> questions that lacemakers have.
>
> If you love Elizabethan anything....
> If you work with Elizabethan textiles, costumes, embroidery, lace....
> If you are a member of the Society for Creative Anachronism....
> If you are recreating Elizabethan clothing (as in Plymouth,
> Massachusetts)....
> If the very thought of absorbing more Elizabethan artwork located
throughout
> Europe and America appeals to you....
>
> This is THE book for your Christmas - 2008!
>
> Jeri Ames in  Maine USA
> Lace and Embroidery Resource  Center
> **************Make your life easier with all your friends, email, and
> favorite sites in one place.  Try it now.
>
(http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dp&icid=aolcom40vanity&ncid=emlcntaolcom000000
10)
>
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