A woman I met at IOLI convention washes the lace attached permanently to the T shirt in the wash, then hangs to dry.
When I was doing my thing as a barrister, (trial attorney in the US) I plunked my lace handkerchief into the chest pocket. And I have a book that has lace that is supposed to go on the lapels of a jacket. Then there's lace scarves made out of laceweight yarn. Lyn in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, US, where it was a beautiful fall day, cool, breezy, brilliant sun. Vast improvement over the rain of the last 3 days. -----Original Message----- From: Sue Duckles Sent: Oct 15, 2011 6:18 PM To: Lyn Bailey Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: [lace] Spreading the word You know it's odd that statement.... Today I attended Pudsey Lace Fair, Jane Partridge was there and we ended up chatting about lace (now I wonder why.... LOL) anyway, one item we were discussing was how many ways one can wear the lace from a tiara.... it could be worn as cuffs on a tshirt for instance. Tiny motifs can be made into brooches, earrings, pendants etc, and you don't have to worry about it going through the washing machine!! You can stitch it onto hankies, tshirt fronts, shirts etc... Once we have the thought that lace can be worn, the ideas are as large as our imagination. Try giving it to a friend, young relation, old relation.... anyone who has ever expressed an interest in lace... tell them about your closest teacher... We may revive this hobby yet!! Sue in East YorkshireOn 15 Oct 2011, at 23:04, Lyn Bailey wrote: Wear lace. That way you can talk about it. Whoââ¬â¢s writing the book on lace on T-shirts? </lynrbailey@desu pernet.net> - To unsubscribe send email to [email protected] containing the line: unsubscribe lace [email protected]. For help, write to [email protected]. Photo site: http://community.webshots.com/user/arachne2003
