[lace] Re: London Auction of Interesting Fashions

2012-06-23 Thread Susan Reishus
(http://kerrytaylorauctions.com)

Thanks for sharing, Jeri!  

I don't have to
eat today, as I am totally satiated!

Best,
Susan Reishus

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Re: [lace] Re London

2006-08-07 Thread Barron
Hi Jo, when I visited the Fan Museum in 2000 my DH and sons went to see the 
Cutty Sark, 
http://www.cuttysark.org.uk/
it's only about 5-10 mins walk from the museum and they enjoyed it much more 
than fans so I got to browse in peace. 
jenny barron
Scotland




But I have to be carefull to make it a trip for us both and not biased too 
much to my interest. Jo Falkink 

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[lace] Re London

2006-08-06 Thread Diana Smith

Hello Jo

You could try the Fan Museum - might be something lacy on view.


http://www.greenwich.gov.uk/Greenwich/LeisureCulture/Attractions/FanMuseum.htm


Best wishes
Diana 


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Re: [lace] Re London

2006-08-06 Thread Jo Falkink

Thanks for the quick responses, my compilation so far:

The Royal and Albert museum sounds like a safe option as there would be 
enough other things to see when my husband gets bored. However, in my 
husbands opinion museums should be reserved for rainy days. I suppose London 
has enough of them, but only 4 days (3 nights) might also be just sunny.


Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace will most likely be on the program from 
a general touristic point of view. Probably Kensington Palace too. I'll 
check for details so I won't miss something interesting.


The fan-museum sounds reachable too, at its website sais it's only 30 
minutes by boat, perhaps faster by underground / Light Railway though we 
might loose time when changing trains. Would the boat trip be an additional 
touristic attraction too?


But I have to be carefull to make it a trip for us both and not biased too 
much to my interest. Once I've been very lucky. The exhibition I wanted to 
visit, was under one roof with old-timers (cars) so that sounded OK 
allready. Uppon entering my husband recognised the owner as a former boss! 
So he had a good time with him, and I with his wife. Private guided tours as 
their were no other visitors at the time.


The torch and wearing a small visible bit of lace sounds like a good idea, 
but I don't know yet exactly what. Usually I frame my projects. But at least 
I have my bookmark sleeves with rejected fragments to put in the tourist 
guide. I'm afraid Pat Earnshaw's The identification of lace (the Dutch 
translation) will be too heavy for our usual hand-luggage-only strategy.


The date is not fixed yet, I don't know yet what all the variables are.

Jo Falkink 


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Re: [lace] Re London

2006-08-06 Thread Aurelia Loveman
	The Victoria  Albert (V  A) is a most marvelous place, 
don't miss it! One could spend a month there, happily. I even got 
waylaid by the gift shop, which is to other museum gift shops as 
Fairyland is to the real world. You will love the whole experience! 
--  Aurelia


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RE: [lace] Re London

2006-08-06 Thread Sue
Dont miss the boat trip it is most enjoyable, I took my family down to
Greenwich by boat and we also visited the tea clipper Cutty Sark which the
menfolk enjoyed tremendously.
Sue M Harvey
Norfolk UK

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Jo Falkink
Sent: 06 August 2006 21:59
To: arachne
Subject: Re: [lace] Re London


Thanks for the quick responses, my compilation so far:

The Royal and Albert museum sounds like a safe option as there would be
enough other things to see when my husband gets bored. However, in my
husbands opinion museums should be reserved for rainy days. I suppose London
has enough of them, but only 4 days (3 nights) might also be just sunny.

Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace will most likely be on the program from
a general touristic point of view. Probably Kensington Palace too. I'll
check for details so I won't miss something interesting.

The fan-museum sounds reachable too, at its website sais it's only 30
minutes by boat, perhaps faster by underground / Light Railway though we
might loose time when changing trains. Would the boat trip be an additional
touristic attraction too?

But I have to be carefull to make it a trip for us both and not biased too
much to my interest. Once I've been very lucky. The exhibition I wanted to
visit, was under one roof with old-timers (cars) so that sounded OK
allready. Uppon entering my husband recognised the owner as a former boss!
So he had a good time with him, and I with his wife. Private guided tours as
their were no other visitors at the time.

The torch and wearing a small visible bit of lace sounds like a good idea,
but I don't know yet exactly what. Usually I frame my projects. But at least
I have my bookmark sleeves with rejected fragments to put in the tourist
guide. I'm afraid Pat Earnshaw's The identification of lace (the Dutch
translation) will be too heavy for our usual hand-luggage-only strategy.

The date is not fixed yet, I don't know yet what all the variables are.

Jo Falkink

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Re: [lace] Re London

2006-08-06 Thread Sue Babbs
I heartily second that - plus Greenwich has the National Maritime Museum, 
the Royal Observatory (with a fascinating collection of old clocks, as well 
as a brass line in the ground so that you can straddle the meridian) and the 
Queen's House.


http://www.nmm.ac.uk/

The park is lovely to walk through,  and
Greenwich used to have some lovely restaurants too. I lived in neighbouring 
Blackheath for about 15 years and never tired of the area.


The tower of London is wonderful to visit too

Sue
- Original Message - 
From: Sue [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: Jo Falkink yhgr.jfp@


Dont miss the boat trip it is most enjoyable, I took my family down to
Greenwich by boat and we also visited the tea clipper Cutty Sark which 
the

menfolk enjoyed tremendously.





The fan-museum sounds reachable too, at its website says it's only 30
minutes by boat, perhaps faster by underground / Light Railway though we
might loose time when changing trains. Would the boat trip be an 
additional

touristic attraction too?



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Re: [lace] Re London

2006-08-06 Thread Malvary J Cole
Jo Falkink wrote  The fan-museum sounds reachable too, at its website 
says it's only 30 minutes by boat, perhaps faster by underground / Light 
Railway though we might loose time when changing trains. Would the boat trip 
be an additional touristic attraction too?


The boat ride down the Thames is very enjoyable.  If your husband isn't 
interested in going to the fan museum he can change boats in Greenwich 
(after he has looked at the Cutty Sark and Gypsy Moth (Chichester sailed 
singled handed round the world in it) and take another tour to look at the 
Thames Barrier - a great engineering feat to help prevent London from being 
flooded.  However, you might want to do that too, it is very interesting.


Malvary in Ottawa

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RE: [lace] Re London

2006-08-06 Thread Ruth Budge
I don't think the Gypsy Moth is there at the momentshe's on another
around the world trip to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Chichester's
original voyage.   Her only stop on this journey was Sydney within the last
week or so.

Ruth Budge (Sydney, Australia)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Malvary J Cole
Sent: 07 August 2006 11:58
To: arachne
Subject: Re: [lace] Re London


The boat ride down the Thames is very enjoyable.  If your husband isn't 
interested in going to the fan museum he can change boats in Greenwich 
(after he has looked at the Cutty Sark and Gypsy Moth (Chichester sailed 
singled handed round the world in it) and take another tour to look at the 
Thames Barrier - a great engineering feat to help prevent London from being 
flooded.  However, you might want to do that too, it is very interesting.

Malvary in Ottawa

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Re: [lace] Re: London Bombings Personal Emergency List

2005-07-11 Thread Fran Higham
Clay Blackwell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote

 Dora wrote,

   I'm thinking, my knapsack is jsut about large
   enough for bicycle tools and rain gear   LOL!

 To which Tamara responded,
  And I hope you never have bombs rain on you, so you can keep on
  laughing out loud for many years to come.

 (snip) I don't
 know Dora, but I expect she has been stung by the words which suggest that
 she is a simpleton who laughs at tragedy.  In times of immense stress,
many
 people need to laugh to maintain their emotional equilibrium.  Dora was
 laughing at HERSELF folks.  Let's not be so hard on her!!

I must admit that I also read Dora's message in a totally different way than
which others here seemed to have read it.  She didn't upset me at all and I
have lived through a mail bomb attempt on the life of my husband, have lived
behind a police cordon during an IRA seige in London in the 1970s (Balcombe
St seige for those who remember) and stood on a the same London platform
where the IRA planted 40lb of plastic explosives packed around with coach
bolts.

My first reaction was to agree with her comment about London being a big
place because I remember just enough from my study of statistics at
University to figure out how unlucky one would be in a city of
7 () million people to be in one of those locations at that vital point
in time.  Statistically the odds against it are very large.

Fran

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Re: [lace] Re: London Bombings Personal Emergency List

2005-07-11 Thread RicTorr8
In a message dated 7/11/2005 1:43:29 AM Mountain Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
My first reaction was to agree with her comment about London being a big
place because I remember just enough from my study of statistics at
University to figure out how unlucky one would be in a city of
7 () million people to be in one of those locations at that vital point
in time.  Statistically the odds against it are very large.
This is true. I read a book once -- the name and title escape me now -- by a 
police expert on avoiding dangerous situations. Among his bits of advice, he 
made the point very effectively that people tend to over-react to situations 
like these, and it doesn't help to panic or overestimate risk: quite the 
contrary! 

And I agree with those who advocate tolerance and understanding toward our 
gentle e-community here

Ricki Torrey
Salt Lake City, Utah 

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RE: [lace] Re: London Bombings Personal Emergency List

2005-07-09 Thread Clay Blackwell
Dora wrote, 

  I'm thinking, my knapsack is jsut about large
  enough for bicycle tools and rain gear   LOL!

To which Tamara responded,
 And I hope you never have bombs rain on you, so you can keep on 
 laughing out loud for many years to come.

But what Tamara did NOT include in her response was a very important
sentence in Dora's note...

Honestly, I read this expecting to see people carrying a personal emergency
kit in case of terrorism!  (which was followed by the description of her
knapsack)

So I believe that we can safely assume that Dora was laughing at her own
mistaken understanding of the personal emergency kit, and NOT at the
horrible experiences everyone even remotely connected to the latest acts of
terrorism have endured.  It is good to laugh at your own mistakes.  I don't
know Dora, but I expect she has been stung by the words which suggest that
she is a simpleton who laughs at tragedy.  In times of immense stress, many
people need to laugh to maintain their emotional equilibrium.  Dora was
laughing at HERSELF folks.  Let's not be so hard on her!!

Clay Blackwell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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RE: [lace] Re: London Bombings Personal Emergency List

2005-07-09 Thread susan
i hate to see people slammed or flamed because someone jumped to
conclusions.  it seems everything anyone says is wrong sometimes even
if they meant well.  i have been there, and i don't want to argue with
anyone.  

i am not getting involved with any side of any story, but i think it
would have been nice to not have 100 people writing nasty letters to
myself or someone else because of one letter that someone
misunderstood.  

i didn't read Dora's letter, but if she is going through what i already
had to a while ago, i hope the moderator will do her job and put a stop
to it.  iI'msure i am  the last person any of you would have liked to
have a response from!  i am also sure eevery timemy name is on this
list someone cringes, but i don't really care. 

 this website is a nice way to learn lace as a hobby, and it is also
nice to talk to others who can help each other out when they are
confused or totally lost.  it's a shame people aren't as careful as
they wish ootherswere about what they write.  i see a lot of careless
aaccusationsabout other countries and other people's governments, but i
see no one flaming or slamming them. 

 i wish other people on this website would acknowledge the letters as
you know they were meant to be for each letter that someone sends that
says something different.  if everyone on this website would do that,
then these things would die down quicker. Making someone feel like they
have been alienated by an entire list of people who are usually quick
to reply to anything could be turned around if the lurkers would send a
nice letter like what was just sent by clay blackwell.  

I'll remind you again i don't really care what you think, but I'll bet
we are all hoping to here more about what was in Dora's bag then what
someone took so offensively in her letter.  we can all have one then,,
and i think we are all going to need them. 

 in America we have our emergency car bags that include a blanket,
candles, flares, jumper cables, food, bottled water, flashlights,
pocket knives, rope, a tarp, chains, and a battery powered radio that
will pick up weather channels.  what could someone carry around with
them to help them in an emergency like this? 

i also agree with Dora because i don't drive.  i walk, ride a bike or
find a ride with someone.  i usually carry a purse with food, a drink,
a pocket knife, a miniature flashlight, a cell phone if you have one,
but a blanket is hard to fit in a purse. it would better for everyone
if you would just print suggestions on what to bring instead of sending
nasty letters. 

 we are all going to end up with gigantic walls built between each
country or state to attempt to stop this crappy terrorism, and then 100
years later we will all celebrate it being torn down just like the
china wall. there is no cure for terrorism and pointless to argue with
people unless you were at al quada's gate.  save the hate for them.



--- Clay Blackwell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Dora wrote, 
 
   I'm thinking, my knapsack is jsut about large
   enough for bicycle tools and rain gear   LOL!
 
 To which Tamara responded,
  And I hope you never have bombs rain on you, so you can keep on 
  laughing out loud for many years to come.
 
 But what Tamara did NOT include in her response was a very important
 sentence in Dora's note...
 
 Honestly, I read this expecting to see people carrying a personal
 emergency
 kit in case of terrorism!  (which was followed by the description of
 her
 knapsack)
 
 So I believe that we can safely assume that Dora was laughing at her
 own
 mistaken understanding of the personal emergency kit, and NOT at the
 horrible experiences everyone even remotely connected to the latest
 acts of
 terrorism have endured.  It is good to laugh at your own mistakes.  I
 don't
 know Dora, but I expect she has been stung by the words which suggest
 that
 she is a simpleton who laughs at tragedy.  In times of immense
 stress, many
 people need to laugh to maintain their emotional equilibrium.  Dora
 was
 laughing at HERSELF folks.  Let's not be so hard on her!!
 
 Clay Blackwell
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 -
 To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the
 line:
 unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 


from susan in tennessee,u.s.a.

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Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
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[lace-chat] RE: [lace] Re: London Bombings Personal Emergency List

2005-07-09 Thread susan
i sent my letter through spell check before i mailed to avoid the
insults of the spelling error obsessions of other lacers and still
there are a few, so if anyone could explain the errors after that i
would love to know.

--- susan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 i hate to see people slammed or flamed because someone jumped to
 conclusions.  it seems everything anyone says is wrong sometimes even
 if they meant well.  i have been there, and i don't want to argue
 with
 anyone.  
 
 i am not getting involved with any side of any story, but i think it
 would have been nice to not have 100 people writing nasty letters to
 myself or someone else because of one letter that someone
 misunderstood.  
 
 i didn't read Dora's letter, but if she is going through what i
 already
 had to a while ago, i hope the moderator will do her job and put a
 stop
 to it.  iI'msure i am  the last person any of you would have liked to
 have a response from!  i am also sure eevery timemy name is on this
 list someone cringes, but i don't really care. 
 
  this website is a nice way to learn lace as a hobby, and it is also
 nice to talk to others who can help each other out when they are
 confused or totally lost.  it's a shame people aren't as careful as
 they wish ootherswere about what they write.  i see a lot of careless
 aaccusationsabout other countries and other people's governments, but
 i
 see no one flaming or slamming them. 
 
  i wish other people on this website would acknowledge the letters as
 you know they were meant to be for each letter that someone sends
 that
 says something different.  if everyone on this website would do that,
 then these things would die down quicker. Making someone feel like
 they
 have been alienated by an entire list of people who are usually quick
 to reply to anything could be turned around if the lurkers would send
 a
 nice letter like what was just sent by clay blackwell.  
 
 I'll remind you again i don't really care what you think, but I'll
 bet
 we are all hoping to here more about what was in Dora's bag then what
 someone took so offensively in her letter.  we can all have one
 then,,
 and i think we are all going to need them. 
 
  in America we have our emergency car bags that include a blanket,
 candles, flares, jumper cables, food, bottled water, flashlights,
 pocket knives, rope, a tarp, chains, and a battery powered radio that
 will pick up weather channels.  what could someone carry around with
 them to help them in an emergency like this? 
 
 i also agree with Dora because i don't drive.  i walk, ride a bike or
 find a ride with someone.  i usually carry a purse with food, a
 drink,
 a pocket knife, a miniature flashlight, a cell phone if you have one,
 but a blanket is hard to fit in a purse. it would better for everyone
 if you would just print suggestions on what to bring instead of
 sending
 nasty letters. 
 
  we are all going to end up with gigantic walls built between each
 country or state to attempt to stop this crappy terrorism, and then
 100
 years later we will all celebrate it being torn down just like the
 china wall. there is no cure for terrorism and pointless to argue
 with
 people unless you were at al quada's gate.  save the hate for them.
 
 
 
 --- Clay Blackwell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Dora wrote, 
  
I'm thinking, my knapsack is jsut about large
enough for bicycle tools and rain gear   LOL!
  
  To which Tamara responded,
   And I hope you never have bombs rain on you, so you can keep on 
   laughing out loud for many years to come.
  
  But what Tamara did NOT include in her response was a very
 important
  sentence in Dora's note...
  
  Honestly, I read this expecting to see people carrying a personal
  emergency
  kit in case of terrorism!  (which was followed by the description
 of
  her
  knapsack)
  
  So I believe that we can safely assume that Dora was laughing at
 her
  own
  mistaken understanding of the personal emergency kit, and NOT at
 the
  horrible experiences everyone even remotely connected to the latest
  acts of
  terrorism have endured.  It is good to laugh at your own mistakes. 
 I
  don't
  know Dora, but I expect she has been stung by the words which
 suggest
  that
  she is a simpleton who laughs at tragedy.  In times of immense
  stress, many
  people need to laugh to maintain their emotional equilibrium.  Dora
  was
  laughing at HERSELF folks.  Let's not be so hard on her!!
  
  Clay Blackwell
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
  -
  To unsubscribe send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] containing the
  line:
  unsubscribe lace [EMAIL PROTECTED] For help, write to
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  
 
 
 from susan in tennessee,u.s.a.
 
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 Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
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Re: [lace-chat] RE: [lace] Re: London Bombings Personal Emergency List

2005-07-09 Thread Tamara P Duvall

On Jul 9, 2005, at 21:22, susan wrote:


i sent my letter through spell check before i mailed to avoid the
insults of the spelling error obsessions of other lacers


Wasn't me, honest Injun :) I do not send flames behind the screen 
(and ignore those sent to me)


and still there are a few, so if anyone could explain the errors after 
that i

would love to know.


Since you ask...  Most are typos, not spelling errors - words which run 
into one another or have the same letter typed in twice instead of once 
- happens to all of us, though I'm surprised the spell-checker didn't 
catch those (I don't use the spell-checker, so all typos are my own 
fault only g)


But you also have to realise that a spell-checker is not totally 
reliable; it's only a dumb machine. A word may seem to it like it's 
spelled correctly but, because of the context, it's still not right.


The most common examples are:
their/there
your/you're
here/hear

In each pair, both spellings are correct, and both spellings will be 
accepted by the spell-checker, because it doesn't know how you're using 
it. But, people who read it within a certain context, will react.


Personally, I saw  only two spelling mistakes (and one of those might 
have ben a typo, also) - the rest were typos, and you're not asking 
about those.



[...]  I'll bet we are all hoping to here more

here/hear. Something that a spell-checker would never catch.


[...] unless you were at al quada's gate.
al Qaeda. The spell-checker might catch/question that, since it's not a 
common word, but a spell-checker can be overriden very easily. Me, I 
know how to spell it, but am startled every time I *hear* it -- comes 
from not listening to radio and TV :)

--
Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/
Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland)

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RE: [lace] Re: London

2005-07-08 Thread Avital
I think Dora may not have realised that my sister works in the govt. buildings
in central London and uses the Underground daily. That's the reason for my
worry. If my sister were a SAHM in one of the suburbs, I wouldn't have been
nearly as concerned, but she does go through Kings Cross frequently and she
travels during the rush hour.

Also, as a resident of one of the most frequently bombed countries in the world,
I know how easy it is to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, as Tamara
said. My sister could have been going to a doctor's appointment, running
errands, or any number of things.

Tacey had a bunion operation a while ago and just got off the crutches 2 weeks
ago. Because her foot is still sore, I'm glad that she didn't have to walk the 6
miles or so back to Lewisham. One of my coworkers came into my office yesterday
to tell me that his aunt had been right behind the double-decker bus. She's
okay, fortunately.

Avital


 -Original Message-
 From: Tamara P Duvall


 On Jul 7, 2005, at 19:20, Dora Smith wrote:

  I wouldn't be TOO worried!   London is a huge city!   One of the
  largest in
  the planet!   Extends for maybe 30 miles across.

 Yeah, well... New York is huge too, as is DC. But that wasn't a mad
 sniper shooting people off one by one at random; this was a
 concentrated attack, on underground trains (and a bus), during rush
 hours, when people are going to work all over the place, so, until you
 know that yours are safe, you fret. Then you start grieving for all
 those who aren't yours, but are human all the same. I well remember
 being in terror on 9/11 until we heard from my stepson - he doesn't
 work on the site, but often had business there. All it takes is being
 in a wrong place at a wrong moment...

 Avital, and all others who've heard from theirs; I'm glad for you.
 And I hope that all ours (those who live in/around London, who were
 visiting for the day of shopping, etc) will report their safety also

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[lace] Re: London Bombings Personal Emergency List

2005-07-07 Thread Tamara P Duvall

On Jul 7, 2005, at 19:20, Dora Smith wrote:

I wouldn't be TOO worried!   London is a huge city!   One of the 
largest in

the planet!   Extends for maybe 30 miles across.


Yeah, well... New York is huge too, as is DC. But that wasn't a mad 
sniper shooting people off one by one at random; this was a 
concentrated attack, on underground trains (and a bus), during rush 
hours, when people are going to work all over the place, so, until you 
know that yours are safe, you fret. Then you start grieving for all 
those who aren't yours, but are human all the same. I well remember 
being in terror on 9/11 until we heard from my stepson - he doesn't 
work on the site, but often had business there. All it takes is being 
in a wrong place at a wrong moment...


Avital, and all others who've heard from theirs; I'm glad for you. 
And I hope that all ours (those who live in/around London, who were 
visiting for the day of shopping, etc) will report their safety also



I'm thinking, my knapsack is jsut about large
enough for bicycle tools and rain gear   LOL!


And I hope you never have bombs rain on you, so you can keep on 
laughing out loud for many years to come.


--
Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/
Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw, Poland)

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Re: [lace] Re: London Bombings

2005-07-07 Thread Paul and Dona

I wouldn't be TOO worried!   London is a huge city!   One of the

largest in
the planet!   Extends for maybe 30 miles across.
Might be a big place but if you're in the wrong place at the right 
timeJust rec'd a pray request from a friend of mine whose friend has 
been critically injured.  She's expected to survive but it will be a long 
road to recovery.  (mentally as well as physically, I'm sure)  Our prayers 
go to all who have been affected.
Dona in Asan, Guam, feeling a bit somber today as memories of waiting hours 
to hear from my husband after the Pentagon attack come flooding back.


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[lace] Re: London

2003-10-14 Thread Ilske und Peter Thomsen
Hello Everybody,
Just to let you know I am back, save and sain. We wer so lucky no one drop
of rain no snowflake but lots of sun and two days very stormy and icecold
wind. It was warvellous. Tel you later about lace, painting walking and so
on.
Greetings
Ilske from HAmburg in Germany 

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[lace] Re: London fabric shops

2003-08-20 Thread Annette Gill
 --- Leonard Bazar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:  
 If you visit John Lewis, Oxford Street, and/or
 Liberty's (both not as good as they were, but still
 marvellous) don't miss Mccullough  Wallace, 

etc etc

Thanks for all these recommendations.  I wasn't aware of these, and have
been looking for good shops in which to buy fabric - mainly silk - for
dolls-house doll costumes. JL and Liberty's had nothing suitable, and they
were the best shops I knew of. Many years ago there used to be a lovely
shop called Theatreland, off Oxford St, where my mther used to get fabrics
for our ballet costumes, but I think it's gone.  I hadn't realised there
were so many other good shops tucked away in that area.

Regards,
Annette,
London


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