Hi David:

I think I’ve got it now. If it’s a leaf with just a gimp or two acting as a 
vein, then I don’t even think of the situation as being two areas of half 
stitch separated by a vein. I think of it as one area with a gimp placed 
decoratively across it, and if that is the case I would prefer not to do any 
extra twists, so as not to wreck the illusion. If I imagine the area as one big 
half-stitch leaf made in bobbin lace, and then later on somebody came with a 
needle and embroidered a gimp thread where the vein should be - that is the 
look I am trying to achieve. So, no extra twists. 

Adele


On Oct 26, 2014, at 8:15 AM, David C COLLYER <[email protected]> wrote:

>> Clay,
>> 
>> However, I have found that in Binche, when I have long stretches of 
>> half-stitch, punctuated by gimps, the more pressing need is to be certain 
>> that the same bobbin is leading through all of this, so that giant holes 
>> don't appear when tensioning "downstream", so to speak.  In cases like this, 
>> I may even add two twists.
> 
> I fully agree with all you wrote. However, if you imagine a large leaf with a 
> gimp or pair of gimps acting as the vein, it is a passive pair passing from 
> one side to the other, so the leading bobbin is unaffected. It is this 
> passive pair which I am wondering was given a twist as it passed through the 
> gimp.
> 
> Actually I've found it doesn't make a whole lot of difference, except that I 
> reckon the work just looks better if I don't twist it. That way both threads 
> in the passive pair will keep going in their original direction. There are no 
> great holes because of the gimp and the leading bobbin going round a pin.

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