Point de Gaze Brussels Needle Lace for Collectors and Lacemakers
By Elizabeth M. Kurella, Self-published, 2017, 168 pages, Soft Cover, $30;
ISBN 978-1-5323-2923-4

Use Subject line of this Review to find on eBay.    Or, write to
_www.lacemerchant.com_ (http://www.lacemerchant.com)   address, which has not
yet been
updated to include a photo of this  book.

You may also find this review under Book Reviews at http://www.nelg.us/ ,
with a photo of  cover.
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The first book of 2017 to arrive at the Lace and Embroidery Resource Center
 is one that will be welcomed by lace collectors and curators, historians,
and  costume experts.

Did you ever wonder why more people do not know how to identify  lace?


Elizabeth Kurella's special brand of lace identification insight informs
each book she has written.  She counsels it is technique, not design, that
provides the means of identifying specific types of lace, which leads to the
assertion that as soon as a set of designs became popular, they were copied
in  whatever technique was available, including machine.

To explain the title of this book: Brussels needle lace was a precursor to
the Point de Gaze developed in about 1850, and manufactured until the early
 1900s:  a span of about 50 glorious years for this lace before
machine-made  laces finally won the lace "battle".

Judging from current auction offerings, quite a lot of  this stylish needle
lace is still available.  It is one of those  laces that, at its finest,
can (when closely studied) make one forget to  breathe.

To those who claim to be lace experts, it is of importance to  have the
ability to differentiate between Point de Gaze (Belgian) and other  refined
European laces, such as Alençon/Argentan/Point de  France (French), and
Burano/Point de Venise (Italian).

It is doubtful most people have ever considered the variety of Point de
Gaze laces produced.  Kurella has separated Point de Gaze into liberally
illustrated chapters:

o    Recognizing (and making)
o    Classic flat
o    With layers of petals
o    With special effects
o    Novelties
o    With no mesh
o    Blends and hybrids
o    Very special
o    Appendix: Plauen Museum folio

Photo captions generally include descriptions rather than simply  names,
because there was never a single authority that assigned names to types  of
lace.  As with all laces, the ability to personally touch it with  your
fingers and study both sides of these laces under magnification adds
exponentially to knowledge.

If you love the genteel needle-made laces of the past, this  book teaches a
lot about how to view and enhance your appreciation  of all of them - in
addition to Point de Gaze - using a method of study  that Kurella has
developed for her lace identification books.  A  combination of design,
techniques
and skills converge to create the  finest-of-the-fine.

Jeri Ames in Maine USA
Lace and Embroidery Resource Center

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