Thank you for the advice Alice. I have some 22 guage spangling wire, so
I will start by playing with that. It always comes off the spool in
loops so I can see how keeping it above the lace would work.

Ayla

Sent from my Windows Phone From: [email protected]
Sent: 19/04/2013 4:50 AM
To: Ayla Middleton
Cc: <[email protected]>
Subject: wire on lace
As someone else said... no hitches on wire.  You want to keep it as
smooth as possible.  Large projects that need a long piece of wire
require it to be wound on a (preferably fat) bobbin and have some sort
of hook to keep the wire from unwinding.

Your brooch pieces might be similar to flower petals I'm making.  They
have a wire gimp on the edge to hold the shape.

My pattern calls for size 22 or 24 wire.  I tried 26 gauge but thought
it a bit weak for the my petals.

My petals run 3 to 6 inches long.  Since I need a 'stem' on my petals,
I cut my wire so it hangs 3 inches longer on each side of the petal.
I don't try to put it on bobbins.  I curl up each end in a loose coil,
the sharp end of the wire in the center of the coil, and have the
length of the wire slightly curved up from the tip of the petal.  It
looks weird.... the bobbins and thread lie on the pillow, and the wire
curls up above them.  When working, I lift my thread up over the wire
coil instead of moving the wire like a normal gimp thread.  As the
petal grows, the wire is fastened down in place.  I do use extra pins
at the point of the petal to anchor the wire in place when I begin
each petal.  Wire is more cantankerous to work with than thread but
sure saves having to heavily starch all the petals.

My petals are worked with a pair of passives on the outside of the
wire gimp.  I've also worked in the past where the wire was the
outside edge and the workers just wrapped around it and back into the
threads.  Just be sure to have a good twist or two on each side of the
wire so it's securely held in place.

A local craft store sometimes carries a craft wire that's 22 or 24
guage and covered with a plastic coating, in colors.  I've been using
up a supply I got some years ago.  I hope they have some more when I
go shopping again.

Experiment with your project and see what works for you.

Alice in Oregon  -- expecting relatives momentarily.  Been cleaning
for weeks. <G>


----- Original Message -----
From: Ayla Middleton <[email protected]>
I've been thinking of trying something like the brooches with wire gimps at
the edges. Does anyone have any advice on what type and gauge of wire to
use? Can you just wind them on bobbins as you would thread? wouldn't the
half-hitch cause problems?

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