Re: [lace] Scottish Lace - Hamilton lace

2007-02-06 Thread Sue
My husband checked out on the internet and found reference to the Duchess of 
Hamilton who brought in a lace teacher from  Europe to teach the children a 
trade, he says that was later taken on by the Duchess of Argyle.

Sue T, Dorset UK



Hi Jean and spiders,

I forgot you were in Glasgow. What a pity they had a pillow there but in 
such a state. I got upset years ago about the state of some beautiful 
Aryshire baby's bonnets in our local museum and made complaint. They 
promptly handed me the job and I've been there ever since. Good thing you 
didn't speak up, they would have collared you too.


Interesting the continental influence in Pitsligo. Wasn't that bit late 
for the migrations of lacemakers from Europe? I thought there were a few 
'waves' of migration of lacemakers but much earlier than that. Does anyone 
know any more about that, or am I wrong?


I'm also wondering, as people turn out deceased estates, whether we might 
find some examples of it now that were not available previously. Maybe by 
promoting the type, it might be more easily recognised.


Can't wait to hear about Ballantrae, I guess it's the UK Guild mag?

---
Rochelle Sutherland

Lachlan (8 yrs), Duncan (7 yrs) and Iain (6 yrs)

www.houseofhadrian.com.au




- Original Message 
From: Jean Leader [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: lace@arachne.com
Sent: Monday, 5 February, 2007 10:05:29 PM
Subject: Re: [lace] Scottish Lace - Hamilton lace


I've visited Hamilton Museum (it's not far from Glasgow). It has lace
pillows and bobbins (all of the typical English Midlands type) and
some lace but only one piece that is said to be Hamilton lace. I took
Jeri Ames there back in 2002 and we were both very unhappy with the
scrambled mess on the lace pillow, enough to put anyone off
lacemaking, but I haven't been back since.

Over ten years ago I tried to follow up the references about Scottish
lace that Mrs Palliser quotes but got nowhere. My feeling is that any
bobbin lacemaking in Scotland was probably of the 'opportunistic'
type - when lace sold well someone set up a 'lace industry' but when
the slump came (as it always did) the lacemaking faded away. I'm not
quite sure why it survived in New Pitsligo - perhaps because it was
taught in the school there as part of the normal curriculum. This is
what I wrote about New Pitsligo lace in an article about Scottish
lace for a German lace magazine:

In the nineteenth century lacemaking developed as a cottage industry
in New Pitsligo, a village in north-eastern Aberdeenshire. It is
uncertain who introduced lacemaking but it was encouraged by the
minister, Rev.W.Webster who came to the village in 1841. He helped to
improve the standard of the lace by bringing in teachers, compiled a
specimen book and also found buyers for the lace including Queen
Victoria. A report on Scottish Home Industries (1895) says that in
the summer 50-60 and in the winter 150-160 persons are engaged in
making lace. Women giving pretty steady attention to the work should
make from 4s. to 5s. a week. The report is illustrated and includes a
picture of a New Pitsligo lacemaker working at a bolster pillow
outside her cottage. The lace was mainly Torchon, worked with the
footside on the left indicating a continental influence, but there
were local names for the patterns such as Lady's Fan, Jumpin Jecks
and Ox-eye. The workers also referred to the movements of the bobbins
as knit and twist instead of the more usual cross and twist. Lace is
still made in New Pitsligo but now only as a hobby.

And Rochelle, there is another Scottish lace - Ballantrae lace - but
you'll have to wait for the July issue of 'Lace'.

Now back to all the things on my list (this wasn't).

Jean in Glasgow, Scotland

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Re: [lace] Scottish Lace - Hamilton lace

2007-02-05 Thread Jean Leader
I've visited Hamilton Museum (it's not far from Glasgow). It has lace 
pillows and bobbins (all of the typical English Midlands type) and 
some lace but only one piece that is said to be Hamilton lace. I took 
Jeri Ames there back in 2002 and we were both very unhappy with the 
scrambled mess on the lace pillow, enough to put anyone off 
lacemaking, but I haven't been back since.


Over ten years ago I tried to follow up the references about Scottish 
lace that Mrs Palliser quotes but got nowhere. My feeling is that any 
bobbin lacemaking in Scotland was probably of the 'opportunistic' 
type - when lace sold well someone set up a 'lace industry' but when 
the slump came (as it always did) the lacemaking faded away. I'm not 
quite sure why it survived in New Pitsligo - perhaps because it was 
taught in the school there as part of the normal curriculum. This is 
what I wrote about New Pitsligo lace in an article about Scottish 
lace for a German lace magazine:


In the nineteenth century lacemaking developed as a cottage industry 
in New Pitsligo, a village in north-eastern Aberdeenshire. It is 
uncertain who introduced lacemaking but it was encouraged by the 
minister, Rev.W.Webster who came to the village in 1841. He helped to 
improve the standard of the lace by bringing in teachers, compiled a 
specimen book and also found buyers for the lace including Queen 
Victoria. A report on Scottish Home Industries (1895) says that in 
the summer 50-60 and in the winter 150-160 persons are engaged in 
making lace. Women giving pretty steady attention to the work should 
make from 4s. to 5s. a week. The report is illustrated and includes a 
picture of a New Pitsligo lacemaker working at a bolster pillow 
outside her cottage. The lace was mainly Torchon, worked with the 
footside on the left indicating a continental influence, but there 
were local names for the patterns such as Lady's Fan, Jumpin Jecks 
and Ox-eye. The workers also referred to the movements of the bobbins 
as knit and twist instead of the more usual cross and twist. Lace is 
still made in New Pitsligo but now only as a hobby.


And Rochelle, there is another Scottish lace - Ballantrae lace - but 
you'll have to wait for the July issue of 'Lace'.


Now back to all the things on my list (this wasn't).

Jean in Glasgow, Scotland

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Re: [lace] Scottish Lace - Hamilton lace

2007-02-05 Thread Rochelle Sutherland
Hi Jean and spiders,

I forgot you were in Glasgow. What a pity they had a pillow there but in such a 
state. I got upset years ago about the state of some beautiful Aryshire baby's 
bonnets in our local museum and made complaint. They promptly handed me the job 
and I've been there ever since. Good thing you didn't speak up, they would have 
collared you too. 

Interesting the continental influence in Pitsligo. Wasn't that bit late for the 
migrations of lacemakers from Europe? I thought there were a few 'waves' of 
migration of lacemakers but much earlier than that. Does anyone know any more 
about that, or am I wrong?

I'm also wondering, as people turn out deceased estates, whether we might find 
some examples of it now that were not available previously. Maybe by promoting 
the type, it might be more easily recognised.

Can't wait to hear about Ballantrae, I guess it's the UK Guild mag? 
 
---
Rochelle Sutherland

Lachlan (8 yrs), Duncan (7 yrs) and Iain (6 yrs)
 
www.houseofhadrian.com.au

 


- Original Message 
From: Jean Leader [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: lace@arachne.com
Sent: Monday, 5 February, 2007 10:05:29 PM
Subject: Re: [lace] Scottish Lace - Hamilton lace


I've visited Hamilton Museum (it's not far from Glasgow). It has lace 
pillows and bobbins (all of the typical English Midlands type) and 
some lace but only one piece that is said to be Hamilton lace. I took 
Jeri Ames there back in 2002 and we were both very unhappy with the 
scrambled mess on the lace pillow, enough to put anyone off 
lacemaking, but I haven't been back since.

Over ten years ago I tried to follow up the references about Scottish 
lace that Mrs Palliser quotes but got nowhere. My feeling is that any 
bobbin lacemaking in Scotland was probably of the 'opportunistic' 
type - when lace sold well someone set up a 'lace industry' but when 
the slump came (as it always did) the lacemaking faded away. I'm not 
quite sure why it survived in New Pitsligo - perhaps because it was 
taught in the school there as part of the normal curriculum. This is 
what I wrote about New Pitsligo lace in an article about Scottish 
lace for a German lace magazine:

In the nineteenth century lacemaking developed as a cottage industry 
in New Pitsligo, a village in north-eastern Aberdeenshire. It is 
uncertain who introduced lacemaking but it was encouraged by the 
minister, Rev.W.Webster who came to the village in 1841. He helped to 
improve the standard of the lace by bringing in teachers, compiled a 
specimen book and also found buyers for the lace including Queen 
Victoria. A report on Scottish Home Industries (1895) says that in 
the summer 50-60 and in the winter 150-160 persons are engaged in 
making lace. Women giving pretty steady attention to the work should 
make from 4s. to 5s. a week. The report is illustrated and includes a 
picture of a New Pitsligo lacemaker working at a bolster pillow 
outside her cottage. The lace was mainly Torchon, worked with the 
footside on the left indicating a continental influence, but there 
were local names for the patterns such as Lady's Fan, Jumpin Jecks 
and Ox-eye. The workers also referred to the movements of the bobbins 
as knit and twist instead of the more usual cross and twist. Lace is 
still made in New Pitsligo but now only as a hobby.

And Rochelle, there is another Scottish lace - Ballantrae lace - but 
you'll have to wait for the July issue of 'Lace'.

Now back to all the things on my list (this wasn't).

Jean in Glasgow, Scotland

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Re: [lace] Scottish Lace - Hamilton lace

2007-02-05 Thread Jean Leader

At 5:52 pm -0500 5/2/07, Rochelle wrote:
Interesting the continental influence in Pitsligo. Wasn't that bit 
late for the migrations of lacemakers from Europe? I thought there 
were a few 'waves' of migration of lacemakers but much earlier than 
that. Does anyone know any more about that, or am I wrong?


It doesn't need a 'wave' - just one person. It's a bit of a mystery 
how the lacemaking in New Pitsligo started but according to one 
account the person who first taught the local women came from 
Aberdeen but had been a lady's maid in France where she had learnt 
lacemaking. (This is from an article in the Costume Society of 
Scotland Bulletin XXVII, Winter 1986, 'A Look at Lacemaking in 
Scotland' by Elsie McArthur.)


Jean in Glasgow.

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Re: [lace] Innismacsaint lace-Hamilton Lace

2007-02-04 Thread Dmt11home
Vis a vis your question about Scottish lace.
 
Well...also in the Blackborne Collection at the MMA is a single piece  of 
something called Hamilton Lace which is explained on pages 430 and 431 of the  
Dover edition of Palliser. (The piece in our collection might well  be 
classified as torchon if it weren't called Hamilton.)
 
The text reads in part: The early death of the Duke of Hamilton, and the  
second marriage of the Duchess, did not in any way impede the progress of  
Hamilton lace, for, as lage as 1778, we read in Locke's Essays on the Scotch  
Commerce--'The lace manufactory, under the patronage of the amiable Duchess of  
Hamilton (now Argyle), goes on with success and spirit.' 
 
The text continues: With respect to the quality of this Hamilton lace,  
laudable as were the efforts of the Duchess, she succeeded in producing but a  
very coarse fabric.  The specimens which have come under our notice are  
edgings 
of the commonest description, of a coarse thread, always of the lozenge  
pattern (Fig 161); being strong and firm, it was used for nightcaps, never for  
dressses, and justified the description of a lady who descirbed it as of little 
 
account, and spoke of it as only Hamilton
 
Continuing:
It appears that the Edinburgh Society died a natural death about 1764,  but, 
not withstanding the untimely demise of this patriotic club, a strong  
impetus had been given to the lace-makers of Scotland. (Footnote 1769. Pennant  
in 
his tour, mentions among the manufactures of Scotland thread laces at Leith,  
Hamilton and Dalkeith.) Lacemaking was introduced into the schools, and what 
was  better far, many daughters of the smaller gentry and scions of noble 
Jacobite  houses, ruined by the catastrophe of 1745, either added to their 
incomes 
or  supported themselves wholly by the making of the finer points.  This custom 
 seems to have been general, and, in alluding to it, Mrs. Calderwood speaks 
of  the helplessness of the English women in comparison to the Scotch.
 
It goes on but I figure most people who are interested have a copy of  
Palliser.
 
I am going to Scotland this spring, actually making a circuit from  
Manchester to Manchester, and would be interested to hear anything about  
Scottish made 
laces. One thing I can't figure out is why the Art Nouveau and the  Craftsman 
movement which produced Modernista lace in Spain, Aemilia Ars in Italy  and 
the laces of the Weiner Werkstatte and the Industrial schools of the  countries 
of the Austro-Hungarian Empire seem to have passed by the laces of the  
British Isles so completely. Am I missing something? I am planning to go to the 
 
Ruskin Museum when I visit England and Scotland, but apart from that, I  don't 
seem to see much lace stemming from those artistic movements. Yet the  
PreRaphaelites, like William Morris, seem to be very needlework  oriented.
 
Any thoughts?
 
Devon
In New Jersey, dreaming of a trip to see things I have never  seen.

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Re: [lace]Scottish Lace -Hamilton Lace

2007-02-04 Thread Lorri Ferguson
About 4 yrs. ago I did a search for Scottish lace info when I was asked by
the local Scottish Games people to demonstrate at the games.  There was not
much to be found, although a University in Mississippi has some books on
Scottish hand crafts.
Hamilton Lace seems to be named for the Duchess of Hamilton who organized
a charitable school in the 18th C.  (see Dictionary of Lace by Earnshaw).
There was also a small 'home lace industry' in New Pitsligo.  The only
patterns or pictures I have seen are defiantly Torchon style and quite course
and very open.
Earnshaw states:  Scottish Lace  There were no commercial centres for
lacemaking in Scotland, and lace does not even appear to have been worn in any
quantity.  There are references in the sixteenth centruy only to pearling, to
'cuttit out work' and to lacis as made by Mary Queen of Scots during her long
imprisonment.
The cobwebby knitted laces of the Shetland marriage shawls can be traced back
to the 1840s  and Scotland was noted for its beautiful Ayrshire work.

I would still be interested in any further information on Scottish laces.
There is a web site (a newspaper I think) with an article about New Pitsligo
lace-making.
see
http://www.buchanie.co.uk/archived/2004/Week_45/village/lace-making.asphttp:
//www.buchanie.co.uk/archived/2004/Week_45/village/lace-making.asp
There is also a booklet Lace-making in Hamilton by Jessie H Lochhead, M.A.,
published by? 'Hamilton Public Libraries and Museum Committee 1971'   The copy
I got on inter-library loan came from the Univ. of Chicago Library.

The Canadian Lacemaker Gazette Vol. 13 No 3 had an article on New Pitsligo
Lace by Sandi Milliken with a pricking of the pattern Bird's Eye with a
diagram by Bev Walker.  Margaret Merner was kind enough to send me a copy at
the time I ask here on Arachne about Scottish laces.  In 2004, I was told
Sandi had taught a class on the New Pitsligo lace at IOLI in the mid 1990s,
had planned to write a book about it but became ill and died in 2002.  In
1993, Sandi and Trish Fisher (WV) had made a trip to New Pitsligo, staying 2
weeks with a local lacemaker/teacher.  Trish states New Pitsligo lace IS much
like Torchon but has it's own special rules and quirks.

Lorri
Graham, WA  USA

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Re: [lace]Scottish Lace -Hamilton Lace

2007-02-04 Thread Rochelle Sutherland
Pitsligo I have heard of and am trying to track down now that I've been
reminded of it. The search I just did on Hamilton hasn't turned up any
pictures, but it has revealed that the Hamilton lace was popular and that
commoners and ladies alike made it. That died out, as things seem to, only to
be replaced by a sort of ' tambour bobbinette' that surged to popluarity and
was everywhere for a few years. If anyone can shed any light on that type of
lace, I would like to know more about it too. That's potentially three
Scottish laces, besides the Aryshire work and lace knitting. 

Thanks one and
all.

 
---
Rochelle Sutherland

Lachlan (8 yrs), Duncan (7 yrs) and Iain (6
yrs)

www.houseofhadrian.com.au






- Original Message 
From: Lorri
Ferguson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED];
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, 5 February, 2007 2:25:18 PM
Subject: Re:
[lace]Scottish Lace -Hamilton Lace


About 4 yrs. ago I did a search for
Scottish lace info when I was asked by the local Scottish Games people to
demonstrate at the games.  There was not much to be found, although a
University in Mississippi has some books on Scottish hand crafts.
Hamilton
Lace seems to be named for the Duchess of Hamilton who organized a charitable
school in the 18th C.  (see Dictionary of Lace by Earnshaw).  There was also a
small 'home lace industry' in New Pitsligo.  The only patterns or pictures I
have seen are defiantly Torchon style and quite course and very open.
Earnshaw states:  Scottish Lace  There were no commercial centres for
lacemaking in Scotland, and lace does not even appear to have been worn in any
quantity.  There are references in the sixteenth centruy only to pearling, to
'cuttit out work' and to lacis as made by Mary Queen of Scots during her long
imprisonment.
The cobwebby knitted laces of the Shetland marriage shawls can
be traced back to the 1840s  and Scotland was noted for its beautiful
Ayrshire work.
 
I would still be interested in any further information
on Scottish laces.  There is a web site (a newspaper I think) with an article
about New Pitsligo lace-making.  
see
http://www.buchanie.co.uk/archived/2004/Week_45/village/lace-making.asp
There
is also a booklet Lace-making in Hamilton by Jessie H Lochhead, M.A.,
published by? 'Hamilton Public Libraries and Museum Committee 1971'   The copy
I got on inter-library loan came from the Univ. of Chicago Library.
 
The
Canadian Lacemaker Gazette Vol. 13 No 3 had an article on New Pitsligo Lace by
Sandi Milliken with a pricking of the pattern Bird's Eye with a diagram by
Bev Walker.  Margaret Merner was kind enough to send me a copy at the time I
ask here on Arachne about Scottish laces.  In 2004, I was told Sandi had
taught a class on the New Pitsligo lace at IOLI in the mid 1990s, had planned
to write a book about it but became ill and died in 2002.  In 1993, Sandi and
Trish Fisher (WV) had made a trip to New Pitsligo, staying 2 weeks with a
local lacemaker/teacher.  Trish states New Pitsligo lace IS much like Torchon
but has it's own special rules and quirks.
 
Lorri
Graham, WA  USA
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Re: [lace]Scottish Lace -Hamilton Lace

2007-02-04 Thread Adele Shaak
  I would still be interested in any further information on Scottish 
laces.


Dear Spiders:

I do like books that were written before people felt the need to be 
politically correct, and would state their opinion fearlessly -


In Chats on Old Lace and Needlework, Mrs. Lowes (circa 1907) states:

Scotch lace can hardly be said to exist. At one time a coarse kind of 
network lace called Hamilton lace was made, and considerable money 
was obtained by it, but it never had a fashion, and deservedly so. 
Since the introduction of machinery, however, there has been 
considerable trade, and a tambour lace is made for flounces, scarfs, 
c. The more artistic class of work made by Scotswomen is that of 
embroidering fine muslin, and some really exquisite work is made by the 
common people in their homes.


The fine muslin embroidery was, of course, what we now know as 
Ayrshire Work and there are some excellent books out on the subject. 
But Scotland in general appears to have been pretty much a bobbin-free 
zone.


Adele
North Vancouver, BC
(west coast of Canada)

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Re: [lace] Innismacsaint lace-Hamilton Lace

2007-02-04 Thread Susan Lambiris
The Honiton revival, the impetus to protect and preserve Bucks Point, and the 
finest of the Beds laces all derive in one way and another from the new designs 
and the new enthusiasm for handwork exemplified by the Arts and Crafts 
movement, 
so the movement didn't so much create new laces in Britain as nourish the ones 
that were already there. There is one exception--Ruskin lace, a cutwork and 
needlelace based on Renaissance styles which was really created de novo in the 
late 1800's, continued to be made on a commercial basis well into the 20th 
century, and is still being taught today--see http://www.ruskinlace.org.uk/
for evidence on how well Ruskin lace has endured into the 21st century.

Of course, William Morris and the Pre-Raphaelites were medievalists, and that 
may account for why they did relatively little themselves to encourage a craft 
which didn't exist in their favored historical period

Sue from Raleigh 

At 21:04:16 EST 2/4/2007, Devon wrote:
I am going to Scotland this spring, actually making a circuit from  
Manchester to Manchester, and would be interested to hear anything about  
Scottish made 
laces. One thing I can't figure out is why the Art Nouveau and the  Craftsman 
movement which produced Modernista lace in Spain, Aemilia Ars in Italy  and 
the laces of the Weiner Werkstatte and the Industrial schools of the  
countries 
of the Austro-Hungarian Empire seem to have passed by the laces of the  
British Isles so completely. Am I missing something? I am planning to go to 
the  
Ruskin Museum when I visit England and Scotland, but apart from that, I  don't 
seem to see much lace stemming from those artistic movements. Yet the  
PreRaphaelites, like William Morris, seem to be very needlework  oriented.
 
Any thoughts?
 
Devon

Susan Lambiris
Raleigh, NC
http://home.earthlink.net/~slambiris/

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Re: [lace]Scottish Lace -Hamilton Lace

2007-02-04 Thread Lorri Ferguson
There is a picture of 'Hamilton Lace' in Palliser 'A History of Lace' in the
section 'Lace Manufactures of Scotland' pg. 383 in my edition.
I did a blow up of it and began trying to recreate a pricking of it.  I really
should get back to that again.

Lorri
  - Original Message -
  From: Rochelle Sutherlandmailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: Lorri Fergusonmailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] ;
[EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] ;
[EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Sunday, February 04, 2007 8:21 PM
  Subject: Re: [lace]Scottish Lace -Hamilton Lace


  Pitsligo I have heard of and am trying to track down now that I've been
  reminded of it. The search I just did on Hamilton hasn't turned up any
  pictures, but it has revealed that the Hamilton lace was popular and that
  commoners and ladies alike made it. That died out, as things seem to, only
to
  be replaced by a sort of ' tambour bobbinette' that surged to popluarity
and
  was everywhere for a few years. If anyone can shed any light on that type
of
  lace, I would like to know more about it too. That's potentially three
  Scottish laces, besides the Aryshire work and lace knitting.

  Thanks one and
  all.


  ---
  Rochelle Sutherland
  
  Lachlan (8 yrs), Duncan (7 yrs) and Iain (6
  yrs)

  www.houseofhadrian.com.auhttp://www.houseofhadrian.com.au/






  - Original Message 
  From: Lorri
  Ferguson [EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED];
[EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED];
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Monday, 5 February, 2007 2:25:18 PM
  Subject: Re:
  [lace]Scottish Lace -Hamilton Lace


  About 4 yrs. ago I did a search for
  Scottish lace info when I was asked by the local Scottish Games people to
  demonstrate at the games.  There was not much to be found, although a
  University in Mississippi has some books on Scottish hand crafts.
  Hamilton
  Lace seems to be named for the Duchess of Hamilton who organized a
charitable
  school in the 18th C.  (see Dictionary of Lace by Earnshaw).  There was also
a
  small 'home lace industry' in New Pitsligo.  The only patterns or pictures
I
  have seen are defiantly Torchon style and quite course and very open.
  Earnshaw states:  Scottish Lace  There were no commercial centres for
  lacemaking in Scotland, and lace does not even appear to have been worn in
any
  quantity.  There are references in the sixteenth centruy only to pearling,
to
  'cuttit out work' and to lacis as made by Mary Queen of Scots during her
long
  imprisonment.
  The cobwebby knitted laces of the Shetland marriage shawls can
  be traced back to the 1840s  and Scotland was noted for its beautiful
  Ayrshire work.

  I would still be interested in any further information
  on Scottish laces.  There is a web site (a newspaper I think) with an
article
  about New Pitsligo lace-making.
  see
  http://www.buchanie.co.uk/archived/2004/Week_45/village/lace-making.asphtt
p://www.buchanie.co.uk/archived/2004/Week_45/village/lace-making.asp
  There
  is also a booklet Lace-making in Hamilton by Jessie H Lochhead, M.A.,
  published by? 'Hamilton Public Libraries and Museum Committee 1971'   The
copy
  I got on inter-library loan came from the Univ. of Chicago Library.

  The
  Canadian Lacemaker Gazette Vol. 13 No 3 had an article on New Pitsligo Lace
by
  Sandi Milliken with a pricking of the pattern Bird's Eye with a diagram
by
  Bev Walker.  Margaret Merner was kind enough to send me a copy at the time
I
  ask here on Arachne about Scottish laces.  In 2004, I was told Sandi had
  taught a class on the New Pitsligo lace at IOLI in the mid 1990s, had
planned
  to write a book about it but became ill and died in 2002.  In 1993, Sandi
and
  Trish Fisher (WV) had made a trip to New Pitsligo, staying 2 weeks with a
  local lacemaker/teacher.  Trish states New Pitsligo lace IS much like
Torchon
  but has it's own special rules and quirks.

  Lorri
  Graham, WA  USA
  ___
  Web email has
  come of age. Don't settle for less than the All New Yahoo! Mail
  http://uk.docs.yahoo.com/nowyoucan.htmlhttp://uk.docs.yahoo.com/nowyoucan.
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Re: [lace] Hamilton Lace

2003-10-14 Thread Tune
Hi Adele and Everyone,
An excellent article on Hamilton Lace is Lace-making in Hamilton by Jessie
H. Lochhead, M.A. published by Hamilton Handbooks and Hamilton Public
Libraries and Museum Committee in 1971. According to the article the lace
could represent the coarsest torchon or the finest Vaenciennes with endless
variations between
Vibeke Ervo very kindly gave me the article.
Best wishes and keep bobbin' along from Avril in Denmark, where it has been
the most beautiful Autumn day, with a touch of our first ground frost this
morning, then glorious sunshine and a wonderful spectacle of Autumn colours.

-- 
And on the 8th day, God created golf courses and lacemakers

Avril Bayne
Denmark 


 
 Lately I have been reading my copy of Mrs. Lowes' Chats on Old Lace
 and Needlework and she has this comment: Scotch lace can hardly be
 said to exist. At one time a coarse kind of network lace called
 Hamilton lace was made, and considerable money was obtained by it,
 but it never had a fashion, and deservedly so.

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[lace] Hamilton Lace

2003-10-13 Thread Adele Shaak
Well, the turkey's ready, the stuffing is made, the pumpkin pie is 
cooling and the kitchen is clean. (for those of you who haven't figured 
it out yet, today is Thanksgiving in Canada)

At last I have some time to ponder a lacemaking mystery. It seems to me 
that a couple of years ago there was some article, somewhere, plus 
reports on Arachne about people taking classes in, a type of Scottish 
bobbin lace that was being resurrected. I have a vague memory that it 
was a kind of point lace.

Lately I have been reading my copy of Mrs. Lowes' Chats on Old Lace 
and Needlework and she has this comment: Scotch lace can hardly be 
said to exist. At one time a coarse kind of network lace called 
Hamilton lace was made, and considerable money was obtained by it, 
but it never had a fashion, and deservedly so.

I'm assuming this 'Hamilton Lace' was the subject of the revival a 
couple of years ago, and despite Mrs. Lowes' strictures I would be 
interested in knowing more about it.

Can someone with a better memory than mine place this lace, and tell me 
where the article on it was? Was it in the Lace Guild magazine, or 
somewhere else?

Adele
North Vancouver, BC
(west coast of Canada)
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