1.5m diameter diameter presumably?  So this will be "almost straight" on 
the outer bands. It could be quite difficult to get a polar grid with so 
little curve 

Using an approximate pi (which is actually 3.1416),  you can multiply the 
diameter by 3 for a guesstimate of the lengths requires, so you are looking 
at a little over 4.5 metres of lace for the outer ring (when you are nearer 
the final calculations you use the actual pi, ie  1.5 x 3.146 which = 4.719m, 
so you can see that x3 gives you a near enough for your original 
calculations).  Also, although this is the mathematical length, your lace will 
almost 
certainly shrink a little when you take the pins out, so as far as the 
pricking length is concerned, you will be making more than 4.719m

Depending on how wide your lace is, the next ring or two won't be a lot 
shorter.  For example, once you have done 10cm width of lace, you take this off 
BOTH sides of the circle, leaving 1.3m diameter, x 3 is 3.9metres of lace, 
and so on.

How are you planning on joining the next ring to the first?  Sewn on the 
pillow or needle and thread afterwards (as in lots of old Maltese lace)?  My 
sister Malvary is making a curtain in strips (and the pressure of everyone 
asking how she's getting on with it has helped her being near to finishing) 
which she has joined on the pillow to get a good tension at the joins, but she 
found even with only one strip to join on, it reduced the portability 
considerably.  Or are you mounting the first ring on tulle, and then adding the 
next ring a little way in and so on, rather than joining lace to lace.  You 
will be allowing yourself a little margin for error if you do it that way.   
And it could be used at any point, with more lace added later.  another 
option would be that you could do some rings with shaped headside edge laces 
and 
just sew to the tulle along the straight edge, rather than all the inner 
ones needing to be insertion type lace.

Another thought is that as you are working curves, what sort of pillow do 
you work on?  The traditional tall Maltese bolster?  Work out how the shape 
of the lace will fit on the shape of your pillow.  In Spain, the lacemakers 
often use a thinnish foam pad (like a yoga mat?) under their pricking and if 
the lace ends up in an awkward place on their bolster pillow, they peel the 
pad off and push it back down in a better place.  For a large/long piece, 
they use two or more pieces of foam in a similar way to how I would use a 
block pillow, with the bonus that they can place them wherever they want on 
their pillow.

Perhaps if you draw out the circle (or a wedge from it at least), you could 
start drawing in the rings matching the widths of the various rings of lace 
you are planning on working.  You will then be able to see the amount of 
curve needed for any particular band, and be able to draft the grid that you 
need.  You'll only need about 20 or 30cm for each ring, which you can then 
copy a few times to give enough pricking to last the length to be worked.

So many things to think about, but that's the pleasure of lacemaking.

Jacquie in Lincolnshire

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