Reading all the disastrous things that can happen to an estate's lace  
treasures prompts me to write about lace ephemera --- some of which I am 
keeping 
 in my library for the use of future researchers.  Ephemera is defined  in 
my dictionary as 1) Something of no lasting significance, or 2) Collectibles 
 not intended to have lasting value.  It is 2) that I am writing about  - 
in this case:  lace posters, lace auction catalogues, brochures  and photos 
of lace exhibits, supplies catalogues, etc.  Presently, some of  these are 
searchable by computer.  But, some are hard to come by, and may  be useful to 
historians after the owners of today's web sites  have passed on and their 
sites have disappeared into ether.  I am  not giving up on paper ephemera and 
related equipment, supplies, etc.!
 
Example:  We read last year that Susan Cox,  Principal of The English Lace 
School had owned laces.  Some of these  laces were being sent to auction.  
It did not take long to  decide information about the School and something 
about her collection  should have a special folio in my library.
 
First, I searched for the School, and located a 36-page 1983  prospectus, 
offered for sale by a U.K. book dealer.  It was  de-accessioned by the Devon 
County Council Library Services.  My local  independent book store gets such 
things for me.  What a treasure of  English 20th Century ephemera about 
lace this is!  It provides  information about classes, teachers (who became 
lace book authors of the  period), and tuition, and had supporting advertising.
 
Then, I began to track the auctions via computer, so there would be  some 
idea of auction values in 2014 (I am doing this also for Pat  Earnshaw's 
laces - filed in thick binders).  There was the big London  auction of a few 
pieces.  Then, Laurie Waters of Lace News listed  seven smaller Susan Cox laces 
in her Ebay Alerts! Twenty-one items -  December 2, 2014.    Note the typo 
- It was really February  2.  The private dealer selling both Cox and 
Earnshaw laces on Ebay is  usually derbeatle, Cheltenham, U.K.
 
If you subscribe to Laurie Waters' Lace News (free), here is what  I do:
 
1.  Wait 10 days to read Lace News, capture pictures and get auction  
results.  I don't want to waste time going back for the results (I never  buy 
lace without holding it in my hands for a personal look and feel).
 
2.  Above the Subject line - to Right - click on "Show images and  enable 
links".  This moves a picture into each description, and  if you click on the 
picture, you can make an enlarged print for  keeping.
 
3.  At the beginning of each entry is http://tinyurl.com/  etc. address.   
Click on that, and see the Ebay final sale price.  Print.
 
Laurie is a knowledgeable expert, and gives a nice assessment of the  
laces, sometimes correcting identification info given by dealers, sometimes  
sharing interesting history.  She also gives condition, if you are  considering 
bidding.  If you would like to learn lace identification, but  other demands 
of life permit only small chunks of free time, this is a wonderful  way to 
see representative examples of laces offered on Ebay, without  plodding 
through hundreds of entries.
------------------------
It would be nice to know if others are trying to keep records that our  
guilds may not have resources to save.  I am mindful that my Hungarian  friend 
has stressed the importance of keeping information in places around the  
world, so if one region is devastated by war and plunder, all is  not lost.  
Women need to be more aware of this.   Men document everything about wars, 
politics, sports, exploration,  business, etc., funding with public money from 
everyone's taxes.   Women?  Not much documentation, though they have always 
represented  about 1/2 the human race.  What lace makers did was once a huge 
 industry, and those of us doing research have difficulty reconstructing  
what was not properly recorded then, and what is not being saved now.
 
If you have lace-related things of historical value that should  be saved 
for future generations, please check with this list (Arachne), a lace  guild, 
or a trusted lace expert, for suggestions.    
 
Jeri Ames in Maine USA
Lace and Embroidery Resource Center

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