Although Lassen by that name is probably Belgian, surely it doesn't mean they are the only people who ever thought of the overlap and sew idea. They might have copied and adapted from the way that finished and bought lace had been cut and joined to use in garments by skilled dressmakers for decades or even centuries

On a slightly different subject are the three whip stitches on each space really needed always/ever? In both Ulrike's 'The Beginning of the End' and Bridget's 'Practical Skills', they only whip twice in each space and they probably both did a lot of research on this. If the sewing thread is a lot finer than the main thread, there may be room for three in some places. There will be some smaller gaps (such as just inside the footside edge passive on the diagram where there is a tiny triangular gap) where there may only be room for one or two stitches. Forcing three stitches into every space will guarantee some distortion and will help it to look thicker than it needs to.

Malvary in a warm but wet Ottawa, who has never done a Lassen join
-
To unsubscribe send email to [email protected] containing the line:
unsubscribe lace [email protected]. For help, write to
[email protected]. Photo site:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lacemaker/sets/

Reply via email to