Yes, the stoof was still in common use in the Netherlands in the 1950s in the 
Salland area when I was growing up. Both of my grandmothers used one when they 
were sitting at sedentary tasks. The clay receptacle, called a test, held peat 
coals. At church there was a row of them which could be reserved for a fee. 


Sent from Samsung Mobile

<div>-------- Original message --------</div><div>From: J-D Hammett 
<[email protected]> </div><div>Date:21-04-2015  15:54  (GMT-05:00) 
</div><div>To: Lace Arachne <[email protected]>,Linda Walton 
<[email protected]> </div><div>Subject: Re: [lace] Dickey Pots - 
written sources please?  and cherry  blossom pattern? </div><div>
</div>Hi again,


Sorry, but I cannot cut the answer from Linda below without losing meaning of 
my note here. 


This dickey pot sounds a like the STOOF (pronounced stoaf as in boat) A stoof 
was a wooden box of about 10��� wide, 10��� deep and 8��� 
high which had five holes in the top and an opening -10 x4 inches) in the 
front. Inside was a pottery bowl were one could place some embers and the stoof 
was then put under the skirts to keep feet and legs warm, not only when sitting 
at the lace pillow, but also in church. I suppose there could have been 
accidents, but I have never heard or read about any. Another meaning of the 
word STOOF (or to take the root of the verb STOVEN in Dutch is to cook gently 
:-) . 


I also think it could have been used by anyone who was working while sitting 
for longer periods. It was certainly still in use early in the twentieth 
century. I remember my grandmother (born 1900 or thereabouts) had one of these 
which belonged to her mother. 


I hope this sideways discussion into auxiliary equipment is of interest to 
other lacemakers.


Happy lace making,


Joepie.









From: Linda Walton
Sent: ���Tuesday���, ���21��� ���April��� 
���2015 ���12���:���17
To: Lace Arachne





On 21/04/2015 07:01, J-D Hammett wrote:
> Hi Linda and other Arachnids,
>
> Is ���dickey pot��� a local name? What is it? (showing my 
> ignorance?).

Joepie.


Well, I think it's local to England; I don't have any information about 
it's being local to the High Wycombe area, or even the county of 
Buckinghamshire.

I've never seen one, but I understand that it is a small fireproof 
container, which lacemakers used to keep warm; they would put something 
like live coals in it and pop it under their skirts to keep their feet 
warm during the long hours spent sitting at their lace pillows.

> My Collins dictionary gives . . .  [snip]
There are indeed a lot of uses for this word, but I selected the one 
that seemed relevant to lace makers' warming devices.  For me, the 
"aha!" moment came when I saw that, in the days of the old professional 
lace makers, it could mean a petticoat and then I made the connection 
with the foot warmer.

Actually, it seems rather dangerous to me.  Could they have placed it 
under a footstool?
Do we have any real information about the dickey pot?  Was it used by 
other workers?  Has anyone seen a real, (authenticated), one?

Linda.

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