Thank you, Brenda!  That makes sense about the prominence of the gimp, and I 
suppose would be true for Flanders, Mechlin, etc. for the same reason. 

I hope my comment about the width of the English channel wasn't offensive. One 
of my favorite quotes is from the English weather broadcast that reported that 
"the continent is cut off by fog"--apocryphal no doubt but wonderful. I'm an 
anglophile so it was meant affectionately :-)

Nancy



________________________________
From: Brenda Paternoster <[email protected]>
To: Nancy Neff <[email protected]>
Cc: Lorelei Halley <[email protected]>; Arachne <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, November 9, 2010 6:13:07 AM
Subject: Re: [lace] right vs wrong sides

A few years ago OIDFA published a very detailed study of all the point ground 
laces "Point Ground Lace; a Comparative Study"
>From the diagrams of the various types of footsides it appears that Bucks 
>Point 
and Malmsbury are alone in having the footside traditionally worked on the 
right.  Downton is with all the continental varieties with the footside on the 
left.

Technically there is no reason why any point ground pricking can't be worked 
either way around - unless perhaps the pattern is very complex and there is 
something, perhaps to do with the gimps, that makes it easier to work in one or 
other direction.  Someone more experienced than me will have to come in on this.

As for right and wrong sides to point ground, yes I was told by Sue Willoughby 
who learned BL as a child from her aunt, that the old lacemakers did consider 
that Bucks Point is made face up because the gimps are slightly more prominent. 
 
It's not to do with the way the gimps are passed between the threads, just that 
the gimp is thicker than the main threads and when the two sets of threads are 
both lying flat against the pricking the other side of the gimp thread will be 
more prominent.

Brenda

> 
> You mention that the side the footside is on "goes with English or 
> continental 

> working methods"--it this true even for all the various point ground laces? 
>that 
>
> Bucks, Downton, etc. would all be worked with the the footside on the right, 
>and 
>
> even similar continental laces such as Tonder or Lille would be worked with 
> the 
>
> footside on the left? That English channel is a lot wider than it looks, 
> isn't 

> it!?!
> 

Brenda in Allhallows
www.brendapaternoster.me.uk

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