"Repairs in vertical stacks, with a suspicious similar distance between the 
 stacks?"  I have a Point de Gaze lappet cap (more recent at about 150  
years), where there are difficult-to-see snags positioned opposite each  other 
when it is placed on my head.  These snags are right where  earrings might 
have been worn.  
 
Something to look for when studying lace is why there is any sign of  
repairs, especially on 1700s or earlier laces.  About 20 years ago,  when 
laying 
a lace on a magnifier and viewing it - enlarged - on an adjacent  computer 
became possible at The Metropolitan, I recall seeing repairs that  are not 
visible to the naked eye or less sophisticated methods of magnification  used 
up to that time.   
 
It is likely that new methods of dating will soon be utilized.  We  should 
be able to really identify threads from different sources and different  
places.  Soon we will have laces that have been carbon dated.  The  thread, 
that is.  One small step forward....
 
Skilled lacemakers once did conservation/restoration by touch as well as  
sight.  The auction example, showing only one side of the lace, is why I  
recommend buying lace that you can examine - in person.  When you sit at a  
table with several similar old laces, there really are different  "feelings" to 
them. 
 
30 or more years ago, I remember Elizabeth Kurella digging into  her purse 
to find a loop (used by jewelers) so she could examine a  lace brought to 
her attention at an Embroiderers' Guild national  seminar.  We've advanced 
from that with vision aids.  Will we ever be  able to remotely "feel" lace with 
our finger tips as part of the  examination process?     
 
Jeri Ames in Maine USA
Lace and Embroidery Resource Center  
----------------------------------------------------------
 
In a message dated 2/12/2017 12:54:29 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
lhal...@bytemeusa.com writes:

...The  date bothers me. However the clothwork and
the shapes of the motifs do fit  better with the mid 1700s than with the mid
1800s.  If it were a part  lace (with lumps on the wrong side) I would be 
not
surprised.  Mechlin/Droschel ground was used as a ground in the mid 1700s in
Brussels  part laces.  It would be added in vertical stripes. This piece
does  show repairs in vertical stacks, with a suspicious similar distance
between  the stacks. But without a photo of the wrong side, showing lumps  
where
motifs ended, I can't use that to explain the date.   Lorelei

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