[lace] Carrickmacross Lace

2014-07-14 Thread Karen ZM
​
Thank you to all who have offered hints and tips after my recent request
for information on Carrickmacross Lace.
I have finished a tiny trial piece and am quite happy with it.
In case anyone is interested in seeing it, I have posted a link to the
photo on FaceBook. Alternatively, you can look for Karen Zammit Manduca in
FaceBook, though I'm not sure if my settings will allow you to look at the
photo.


https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152145895827343&set=a.1015141902857
2343.1073741830.651257342&type=1&theater

Thank you everyone.

Karen in Malta.

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[lace] Carrickmacross lace - Books, Collar hints and Wet Cleaning

2014-06-27 Thread Jeriames
Dear Karen,

You are wise to express concerns about the fragile nature of this  lace.
Have you looked at the correspondence about Carrickmacross in our  digest?

http://www.mail-archive.com/lace@arachne.com/index.html

Put Carrickmacross in the search box, and read a lot we have said through
the years.  For those interested in books, put Carrickmacross 8/23/2010 in
the search box to read a list from me.

Proper supplies and technique are important to ensuring a long life for
your laces.  Then comes care.  To a one-piece Carrickmacross collar,  open in
front, I added pops (small circles of buttonhole stitches) where I  wanted
to use a cameo pin.  Then, I cut a piece of bias-woven white  lawn tape to a
size that would be hidden by the cameo and marked where I  wanted my pin to
go in and out of the tape.  Insert pin in one pop, then  into tape and up
again through tape into other pop, and close pin.   The hidden tape holds the
weight of a small cameo.  Collar will  rest in place, without being pinned
into your garment.  I made a Summer  dress for just this collar to rest on,
so no neck oil would stain it.   Another collar solution is to make fabric
tabs or thread loops and attach  them with stitches at the front of a lace
collar.  Pin into the tabs  or loops.  Never pin directly into lace!!!  A
third
possibility (for  tape lace collars) is to thread a grosgrain ribbon (it
has no wrong  side) through openings in the two sides and tie in a bow.  Use
more ribbon than you think you need.  A large looped bow looks  wonderful
with large Battenburg tape lace collars.  Another  possibility is to baste a
collar directly on a dress.  Stitch in the holes,  not in the lace threads.
Test dark colored dresses, as some will  discolor or transfer fibers to the
underside of lace.  Be especially  careful of denim, because dyes rest on
the tightly-woven surface and rub off on  light colors.

Those of us who have been hand washing laces for 50 years must  remember
that new lace makers are accustomed to easy-care fabrics and whatever  water
comes out the pipes, combined with strong detergents, in machines  that churn
whatever is placed in them.

A conservator will tell you that Carrickmacross is fragile, and must be
handled carefully in the wash.  A clean white enamel basin is best  -  look
for one at yard sales, since everything now available seems to  be plastic.
Mine is oval, with inside measures of 16" x 12  1/2".  Paint nail polish over
any chipped enamel, to avoid rust  stains.  Basin should be very clean;
detergents wiped away with white  vinegar on a cloth.

Wash Carrickmacross alone (no additional pieces) in 1 inch of  room
temperature distilled water with a little Orvus soap which you prepare  before
floating lace in it.  If you do not have a delicate touch, sandwich  lace
between two layers of soft net (not the scratchy kind) and baste around  lace
item
to keep it from shifting in this envelope.  This will resist most  of the
effects of gravity and water weight.  Do not agitate.  Do  not scrub.  Let
lace soak a few hours if there are stains,  so the fibers can expand and
stains can detach.  Hold piece flat  to bottom of basin and pour off dirty
water.
 To rinse, pour fresh  distilled water in from the side of basin, not
directly on lace.   Repeat.  Pour final rinse water away.  Sometimes wet  lace
looks dingy, but it has a way of drying clean.  Roll out of  basin on a soft
towel with no texture to catch in lace picots.  Blot.  Lay on a clean surface
(pre-wiped with white vinegar) to dry.  Shape  piece for drying, but do not
pull in any direction.  You can finger press,  and warmth of your fingers
will hasten drying.  Press carefully with an  iron, preferably no warmer than
your hand can tolerate.  Don't let  iron point get caught in the picots.  A
damp light weight pressing cloth  may be helpful.

Sounds like a lot of work, but you must remember how much  more time was
spent making your Carrickmacross lace, and how long it  would take to replace
it.

It is best to consider what will be easiest to care for before tackling
something like a collar that will be soiled by skin oil combined by whatever
dust or sand is floating around and will attach itself to the  oil.  For a
collar, my recommendation is to design a pattern  to fit a garment, so it can
be basted on the garment.  That way, the  skin oil issue - on lace - is
avoided.  Be patient when removing  basting threads for lace storage or wet
cleaning, so no knots are pulled through  the lace.  One must avoid activities
and jewelry (dangling earrings, charm  bracelets, pronged rings) that might
catch in the picots (which are much  larger and more open than in other
types of laces).  Be careful when adding  and removing a sweater, jacket or
coat, because the texture and your  movements may injure the lace.  Watch
where
your car's seat  belt is dragging over your shoulder.

Sorry.  This is a fragile lace.  It needs more caution than  most.

Please save this memo in your C

Re: [lace] Carrickmacross lace

2014-06-26 Thread Rochelle Sutherland
The thread used to couch is cotton and the first wash shrinks it a little to
really bed down the couching thread. It is critical to ensure that your
couching stitches are horizontal.  No lace is particularly durable but with
careful washing it will cope with some wear. Also repairs are easily made.
There is a special type of scissors with a ballpoint on the lower blade which
makes cutting the net impossible, but you still have to worry about cutting
the couching stitches. We all hold our breathe when we do the cutting.
 
---
Rochelle Sutherland 

&

Lachlan (16 yrs), Duncan (14 yrs) and Iain (13 yrs)
www.houseofhadrian.com.au


>I was really puzzled to find out that the thread
which is couched down is
>simply thatjust couched down. I was always of
the impression that it
>would be buttonhole stitched down to prevent the
organdie from fraying,
>although I do realise that organdie does have special
properties.
>
>My question is this. Is the couching enough to prevent the
organdie from
>working away from the tulle with time? I imagine it should be
fine if a
>piece is to be framed, but what about things like collars and fans
that are
>made for use?
>
>I would be grateful for some comments and
discussion.
>
>Thanks,
>Karen in Malta.
>
>

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Re: [lace] Carrickmacross lace

2014-06-26 Thread Maureen
Dear Karen

Carrickmacross is a lovely fine lace.  I don't do much, more of a bobbin and 
Needlelacer but I do teach basic Carrickmacross.  The organdie will hold and 
not fray away but you need fine stitches to hold your couching thread down and 
they should be no further apart then The width of the thread you are couching 
down.  Can't lay my hand on the books at the minute but I seem to think the 
thread you are couching down is about  60/80 crochet cotton thickness.  When 
you trim the organdie away, be very careful you don't cut the net, I have done 
that and it is annoying.  Also when trimming leave just a very small amount of 
the organdie next to the couching thread, would say about 1mm at a guess.   
Also if you are putting loops around the edge of the piece, when you come to 
cut the excess fabric and net away, fold the loops back out of the way and hold 
them down with your thumb.  I didn't do this on my first piece and cut a loop.  
This is obvious when you are told it but not always be!
 fore.  I use the special Carrickmacross scissors with a bulbous end on one 
blade which helps a lot.

Look forward to seeing your results.

I hope this makes sense, if not please ask again

Regards 
Maureen

> 

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Re: [lace] Carrickmacross lace

2014-06-26 Thread Web
Karen,
I took one class on Carrickmacross and have only made a couple of pieces.  I 
found the key was to make sure the vouching stitches are very close together.  
You are right, the lace can be really lovely.
Liz, Raleigh, NC, USA

> On Jun 26, 2014, at 5:39 AM, "Karen M. Zammit Manduca"  
> wrote:
> 
> ​I have just started to try making some of this exquisite lace. Last night,
> I started a small pattern featured on page 15 of Volume 28 No 2 (77) of the
> Irish Lace Journal of The Guild of Irish Lacemakers. I also have a couple
> of good books to help.
> 
> I was really puzzled to find out that the thread which is couched down is
> simply thatjust couched down. I was always of the impression that it
> would be buttonhole stitched down to prevent the organdie from fraying,
> although I do realise that organdie does have special properties.
> 
> My question is this. Is the couching enough to prevent the organdie from
> working away from the tulle with time? I imagine it should be fine if a
> piece is to be framed, but what about things like collars and fans that are
> made for use?
> 
> I would be grateful for some comments and discussion.
> 
> Thanks,
> Karen in Malta.
> 
> -
> To unsubscribe send email to majord...@arachne.com containing the line:
> unsubscribe lace y...@address.here. For help, write to
> arachne.modera...@gmail.com. Photo site:
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lacemaker/sets/

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[lace] Carrickmacross lace

2014-06-26 Thread Karen M. Zammit Manduca
​I have just started to try making some of this exquisite lace. Last night,
I started a small pattern featured on page 15 of Volume 28 No 2 (77) of the
Irish Lace Journal of The Guild of Irish Lacemakers. I also have a couple
of good books to help.

I was really puzzled to find out that the thread which is couched down is
simply thatjust couched down. I was always of the impression that it
would be buttonhole stitched down to prevent the organdie from fraying,
although I do realise that organdie does have special properties.

My question is this. Is the couching enough to prevent the organdie from
working away from the tulle with time? I imagine it should be fine if a
piece is to be framed, but what about things like collars and fans that are
made for use?

I would be grateful for some comments and discussion.

Thanks,
Karen in Malta.

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[lace] Carrickmacross Lace

2008-05-18 Thread Elizabeth Ligeti
Hi, Jeanette,
I never wash my Carrickmacross.  Yes, I have worked one small piece on silk
net, and it worked up well.

Unless you get it dirty I would not bother trying to wash it.

If it was cotton - then I would wash the net and the muslin/lawn (whatever)
separately first, as they might shrink at different levels.
I believe carrickmacross lace is not a very good lace to make if it needs
washing regularly, as the muslin layer, which is only held in place by the
corded stitching can pull away from the couple of threads holding it in
place.

Good luck with the project.
Regards from Liz in Melbourne, Oz.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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[lace] Carrickmacross lace

2005-05-19 Thread Elizabeth Ligeti
We had the pleasure of meeing Mary Shields here in Melbourne just over a 
year ago. She was visiting a daughter who lives here, I think, and a special 
day was organized for her to meet some lacemakers.
As you say, she is a delightful person, and she ended up giving us an 
impromptu lesson.  She brought some of her lace to show us - and it was 
exquisite.

I am looking forward to meeting her again in Denver.
Regards from Liz in Melbourne, Oz
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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[lace] Carrickmacross Lace

2005-05-17 Thread Lindy Taylour
Hi All

For those interested in Carrickmacross lace, Mary Shields tells me she will
be teaching at the IOLI Convention in Denver in August.  She will also be
giving a class at  Ithaca next October for the Finger Lakes Lace Guild's
25th Annual Lace Day Event.

Hope some of you can attend these classes. I thoroughly recommend Mary.  She
is an excellent teacher and a really nice person.

Lindy in Ireland (who has begun to learn Carrickmacross from Mary)

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[lace] Carrickmacross Lace wearability

2004-08-17 Thread Linda Greyling
A waistcoat in Carrickmacross, mentioned on the list yesterday,  must be breathtaking 
but how do you care for it?  

>From what I have heard it is not a lace that can be washed easily.  If the net and 
>organdie is both cotton it will shrink in water.  The shrinkage can be at different 
>rates.

I am working on a little butterfly motif in Carrickmacross to make a card with.  We 
had a workshop on this last Saturday at our guild meeting and it was said that this is 
not a lace suitable for hard wear.  It is a good lace for cards as you can make a 
simple motif that looks quite striking, not taking too much time.

Have anyone tried to wash the material before starting to make the lace?  Not that I 
plan a big project in this but it might be useful information for future reference.

Linda Greyling
Helderkruin near Johannesburg 
Cold (18 oC)  although the sun is shining

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