Re: Subject: [lace] Roller pillow and lace

2011-12-08 Thread Sue
Good advise as it isn't very wide.   I designed this pattern as a square 
photoframe for Alice for the Arachne exchange in 2008 I think, and have 
since changed it to be this straight strip to try on this pillow.  I called 
it Alice of course:-)  It is working up well and getting me into the swing 
of using up the silk threads, finding out all the little things I dont know 
yet and even bringing in new threads as I go, at the moment.
We have two of those little glass angels which we bought last december at 
our local garden centre which puts up a fabulous christmas display every 
year.  I bought them because I liked them for our small christmas tree and 
when we got them home my DH told me how lovely they would look with some 
lace around them, !!!  bless him.. LOL.   As if I didn't have anything to do 
at all.  this year I started very early so was all finished during November 
and didn't buy anything this year that just needed that extra bit of lace:-) 
hense the reason I have time to play and get used to this new pillow I have 
only had for 5 or 6 months:-)

Sue T


It looks like a fairly small roller to me, so definitely try a small 
sample of

lots of bobbins first.  Looks like a nice pattern to work for demo'ing.

BTW, where did you get the little glass angel that you put the lace skirt 
on?  I

have not seen those before.  I wonder if anyone carries them in the US.
Janice

Subject: [lace] Roller pillow and lace
MY DH has taken a photo of the roller pillow (just as I was putting it to 
bed

the other evening, so I have uploaded it onto the webshots site in the
hurwitzend album.  He was the other side of the pillow, so has the 
finished
lace, and the roller.  the bobbins are pinned up inside the cover cloth 
the

other side of it.
Sue T
Janice Blair
Crystal Lake, 50 miles northwest of Chicago, Illinois, USA
www.jblace.com
http://www.lacemakersofillinois.org


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Re: [lace] roller pillow and lace (Maltese pillow)

2011-12-08 Thread robinlace
 Lorelei Halley lhal...@bytemeusa.com wrote: 
I have seen many Maltese silk pieces with turned corners, but these also would
be mid 19th century or just a little earlier, and I have no idea what shape of
pillow was used on Malta.

What today in Malta/Gozo is called a traditional pillow looks like a loaf of 
French/Italian bread.  It is a bunch of straw wrapped in brown paper (like 
grocery bags!).  About 4-6 inches (10-15 cm) diameter and 24 inches (60 cm) 
long.  I don't know how far back that pillow originated.

Robin P.
Los Angeles, California, USA
robinl...@socal.rr.com

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Subject: [lace] Roller pillow and lace

2011-12-07 Thread Janice Blair
It looks like a fairly small roller to me, so definitely try a small sample of 
lots of bobbins first.  Looks like a nice pattern to work for demo'ing.

BTW, where did you get the little glass angel that you put the lace skirt on?  
I 
have not seen those before.  I wonder if anyone carries them in the US.
Janice

 Subject: [lace] Roller pillow and lace
MY DH has taken a photo of the roller pillow (just as I was putting it to bed
the other evening, so I have uploaded it onto the webshots site in the
hurwitzend album.  He was the other side of the pillow, so has the  finished
lace, and the roller.  the bobbins are pinned up inside the cover cloth the
other side of it.

Sue T
 Janice Blair
Crystal Lake, 50 miles northwest of Chicago, Illinois, USA
www.jblace.com
http://www.lacemakersofillinois.org

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[lace] roller pillow and lace

2011-12-07 Thread Lorelei Halley
Lyn
The issue of turning corners only arose in the mid to late 19th century.
Turned corners did not exist earlier.  Instead only flat edgings or insertions
were made, and these were folded or gathered to make hankie edgings or
collars.  If you look at the portrait paintings in Levey, for instance, the
painters often represented these folds and gathers quite realistically.

So your question would have to be revised to: what kind of pillows were they
using in the last half of the 19th century?  My understanding of Bedfordshire
lace is that it was made on a very large, almost spherical pillow as much as
18 - 20 inches in diameter.  It is possible Bucks was also made on the same
type of pillow (although I don't know this for certain).  And I have seen mid
to late 19 th century Bucks prickings which have corners.  I don't think I
have ever seen a LePuy guipure with a turned corner, except for the modern
ones published just recently (where the author has devised turned corners
which didn't exist in her exemplars).

I have seen many Maltese silk pieces with turned corners, but these also would
be mid 19th century or just a little earlier, and I have no idea what shape of
pillow was used on Malta.
Lorelei Halley

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[lace] roller pillow lace

2011-12-04 Thread Jean Nathan
I made myself a travel pillow of the  handbag type Sue has, but mine had a 
compartment at each end of the roller - one for a pin cushion and the other 
for tools. It also had a platform about half an inch deep in front and 
behind the roller for sticking pins into hold a tape running over the top of 
the roller which held it still.


On the only occasion I used it, I rolled the lace onto a soft sausage 
which I just placed on the sloping back panel when working, and, when I 
wanted to closed the handbag up, I placed a pad of cotton cloth on top of 
the pins and put the sausage on top of that. Because the folded up pillow 
doesn't get rough handling, and the sausage was on top of the pins on top of 
the roller so it was where the sides of the bag were sloping together, it 
stayed in place.


I have to add that I only used it once because I just don't get on with 
roller pillows of any description, but it was useful for a spell in 
hospital. I sold it on ebay earlier this year for what I consider to be a 
very silly high price.


Jean in Poole, Dorset, UK 


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[lace] Roller Pillow plus

2011-12-04 Thread Sue
Thank you all for your comments, it would appear that you all use some sort of
soft sausage shape which is now so obvious:-)  I will play with the general
idea and see what works best inside the bag open and closed and to make sure
future lace rolls off the pillow in good condition for use and obviously
keeping it clean as well while working it.   This was just started as a test
piece using up the spare silk thread rather than wasting it and to see if I
could get the hang of the pillow, I was not convinced initially, but am
delighted with how it is progressing.
I used normal pricking card which might have been a mistake, its tough getting
the pins in (and the top of my finger is getting a bit sore), so will
downgrade to light weight card another time that I can print the pattern
directly on and then put the blue sticky on the top. What is the minimum
depth you might put pins into this thicker card and pillow, so it would stay
put but not have to press so hard?   Because it is just a strip I dont need to
push them right into the pillow at any point and what is the minimum
recommended amount of pins you would leave in the pattern as you work,
obviously removing from the back to put in the front as you work?   It has
only got 14 or 15 pairs in the work and on a 2mm dia grid, so fairly close
together.
Alice, I am working the pattern I made up for you for the exchange g.

Sue T
Dorset UK
www.hurwitzend.co.uk

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[lace] Roller pillow lace

2011-12-04 Thread Alex Stillwell
Hi Sue

I started lacemaking before the rollers were invented.  I place a large
handkerchief or strip of white fabric under the lace and pin to the pillow
either side of the pricking immediately behind the pins and fold it
outlengthwise over the lace. I then roll it up and secure the roll with a pin
on either side of the pricking.  When the lace is too long for the strip of
fabric I fold the fabric lengthwise round the lace starting from the end of
the lace and then roll up. I pin a small handkerchief under the roll and pin
behind behind the pins as before, then I bring it up over the roll and secure
it. I have been doing this for a long time and never found the need to use a
roller. I have always been wary that its rigidity and weight might possibly
distort lace. Let me know if you need any more information.

Best wishes however you solve your problem.

Alex

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[lace] roller pillow lace

2011-12-03 Thread Sue
Months ago we bought me a travel roller pillow but it has taken me until now
to get it into use.   I have a roller with the block pillow but could not get
the hang of working with it, so was a little cautious with this one, but after
reading all your info last time I asked I have tried out various ways to get
it working.   There wasn't room to wrap wool blanket around it, so in the end
I have a thin layer of foam with a couple of layers of cotton fabric pulled
tight around it and the pattern fits beautifully around that.
I am using up the spare left over silk threads left on the bobbins from my
finished garter.   So last night I set to attaching the pairs on my prepared
pattern.  Just about 15 pairs for one of my own torchon designs and was away
without any hitches:-)  I am really pleased with how it is going but need to
know the best way to store the made lace.  On my block pillow I use one of the
little rolling pin shapes to roll the lace around for safe keeping but there
is no where to pin it down on this pillow.
Closed up it is like a small rectangular shopping bag, with the roller in the
bottom.
Any suggestions please
Sue T
Dorset UK
www.hurwitzend.co.uk

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Re: [lace] roller pillow lace

2011-12-03 Thread Sue
Hi Bev, There is a little pocket but it is sideways on and wouldn't hold the 
lace.  Maybe if I where to wrap a clean hanky around it until it gets longer 
but then feel it should be rolled around something so it doesn't have 
creases in.

I went to bed so excited and pleased with myself, LOL.
Sue T

Bev wrote..

Hello Sue
I've seen several roller pillows with work in progress, the finished
lace going into a little drawstring bag behind the roller. One
lacemaker made one from fabric that matched her cover cloth, but the
others used translucent nylon gift bags such as sold at a dollar
store.
A roller pillow I made with the same fold-up arrangement had a pocket
sewn to the back where the finished lace was meant to go. This is fine
while the pillow is out and in use, when the pieces were folded up the
lace wouldn't stay in the pocket.
Hope this might help ;)

On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 11:28 AM, Sue hurwitz...@btinternet.com wrote:

 I am really pleased with how it is going but need to
know the best way to store the made lace. On my block pillow I use one of 
the
little rolling pin shapes to roll the lace around for safe keeping but 
there

is no where to pin it down on this pillow.


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RE: [lace] roller pillow lace

2011-12-03 Thread mary carey
Dear Bev,

I have made two sausages, between 1 and 11/2 (stuffed with wool wadding
left over from quilting projects).  The larger one I used to make a length of
41/2 torchon, the smaller one I used on my small round pillow, sure it could
be used with my travel pillow.  The ends of the sausage are pinned to the
pillow to secure them.

Mary Carey
Campbelltown, NSW, Australia


 On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 11:28 AM, Sue hurwitz...@btinternet.com wrote:
   I am really pleased with how it is going but need to
  know the best way to store the made lace. On my block pillow I use one of
  the
  little rolling pin shapes to roll the lace around for safe keeping but
  there
  is no where to pin it down on this pillow.

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Re: [lace] roller pillow lace

2011-12-03 Thread bev walker
Hello Sue
Yay, well done on bringing the roller pillow up to speed!

I've seen several roller pillows with work in progress, the finished
lace going into a little drawstring bag behind the roller. One
lacemaker made one from fabric that matched her cover cloth, but the
others used translucent nylon gift bags such as sold at a dollar
store.

A roller pillow I made with the same fold-up arrangement had a pocket
sewn to the back where the finished lace was meant to go. This is fine
while the pillow is out and in use, when the pieces were folded up the
lace wouldn't stay in the pocket.

Hope this might help ;)
On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 11:28 AM, Sue hurwitz...@btinternet.com wrote:

   I am really pleased with how it is going but need to
 know the best way to store the made lace.  On my block pillow I use one of the
 little rolling pin shapes to roll the lace around for safe keeping but there
 is no where to pin it down on this pillow.

-- 
Bev in Shirley BC, near Sooke on beautiful Vancouver Island, west
coast of Canada

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Re: [lace] roller pillow lace

2011-12-03 Thread bev walker
You could make a temporary 'roller' from a piece of fabric, something
that would act as a core but  would be more flexible than a wooden
cylinder.

On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 11:50 AM, Sue hurwitz...@btinternet.com wrote:
 Hi Bev, There is a little pocket but it is sideways on and wouldn't hold the
 lace.  Maybe if I where to wrap a clean hanky around it until it gets longer
 but then feel it should be rolled around something so it doesn't have
 creases in.
 I went to bed so excited and pleased with myself, LOL.


-- 
Bev in Shirley BC, near Sooke on beautiful Vancouver Island, west
coast of Canada

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Re: [lace] roller pillow lace

2011-12-03 Thread Clay Blackwell

Hi Sue, Bev, Mary Carey -

I agree with Mary Carey...  the little sausage is easy enough to 
make.  I made one with a short length of plastic drinking straw as a 
core to give it stability, and wrapped a bit of quilting batting (low 
loft) around it.  Covered it with a bit of cotton that matched my cover 
cloths, and tied the ends with tightly wound thread.  I cut the ends 
about 1/2 inch long, and use them to pin the sausage to the backside of 
the pillow.  It works very well, and the best thing is that it is gentle 
on the lace and doesn't distort it,  or create folds.  Still, it's 
stable enough to keep it from being crushed in transit.


Clay

Hard at work in cold Virginia, preparing the brochure for Lace at Sweet 
Briar, 2012


Clay Blackwell
Lynchburg, VA   USA

On 12/3/2011 3:10 PM, mary carey wrote:

Dear Bev,

I have made two sausages, between 1 and 11/2 (stuffed with wool wadding
left over from quilting projects).  The larger one I used to make a length of
41/2 torchon, the smaller one I used on my small round pillow, sure it could
be used with my travel pillow.  The ends of the sausage are pinned to the
pillow to secure them.

Mary Carey
Campbelltown, NSW, Australia




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Re: [lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-16 Thread Clay Blackwell
If you decide to use this kind of padding, shop carefully!  Some felt 
padding these days has rough bits in it that would definitely stop a 
pin.  Another no-no would be the non-slip coating they sometimes spray 
on the back.  If you're going to use padding, be sure it's clean 
fibers/felt, with no hard slubs.


Clay

On 8/16/2011 1:16 AM, robinl...@socal.rr.com wrote:

The rollers I've made for pillows used the fibrous-type carpet padding.  That's 
getting harder to find, more and more carpet stores sell only the foam rubber 
type.  The short ends should be cut at an angle (taper the material) so that 
there are no ridges where the padding starts and stops.  The rug padding is a 
lot thicker than wool blankets, so it doesn't take as much tedious winding.  
Then a relatively short strip of wool blanket over the padding and a cover.  
The fibrous padding holds the pins well and is easily penetrated by them.

Robin P.
Los Angeles, California, USA
robinl...@socal.rr.com

 lacel...@frontier.com wrote:
There are ways to make long-lasting rollers, and ways that are shorter lived.  
The best rollers, and long lasting, are made from wool fabric, rolled around a 
supporting dowel.  They need to be just deeper than the length of pins to be 
used.  Thick sections of cotton fabric would be hard to pin into.

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[lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread Sue
We fairly recently bought a Travel pillow (like a little shopping bag) with a
roller pillow inside.As I am new to roller pillows I have a small and
simple pattern neading about 8 pairs of bobbins and which doesn't go all the
way around the roller to put onto it to get used to the change before I set
something reasonable up on it.
I have read in the past of the various ways that people help preserve the
surface of a roller pillow... this one I would suspect is polystyrene with
very light wood ends.I went into the archives to read but am not sure that
I was reading about the right coverings.   Lots seems to have been made from
scratch using a coffee tin or something and covered with layers of wool or
cotton.
I have lots of white cotton fabric I could cut a strip off and wrap around if
that would help.  What depth would I need to use save the polystyrene from
going soft which is what has happened with my block pillows.  I think I
remember reading about shrinking the fabric first?
Can someone point me in the direction of specific text about this.
Many thanks Sue.
Sue T
Dorset UK
www.hurwitzend.co.uk

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Re: [lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread Malvary Cole
Sue T asked I have read in the past of the various ways that people help 
preserve the surface of a roller pillow...


I think that the best thing to cover your roller with is wool fabric (old 
blanket or clothes cut into strips and wound as tightly as possible round 
the styrofoam centre.   One thing you will have to consider is how much 
space do you have so that the roller will still fit into its space, probably 
not enough to fully protect the styrofoam centre.


I would mention that when you create your pattern do make sure it is longer 
than the circumference of the roller so that you have a loop.  This means 
that as you are working and unpin from the back and pin at the front the 
pins go into the pillow at a different place each time.  I have been using 
my travel pillow for a long time and the weakest part is where the large 
holding pins go into the roller.  There is a definite groove at each side 
but the working surface is still holding the pins quite nicely and I didn't 
do anything to the roller by way of padding.


Malvary in Ottawa (the Nation's capital) where we have a grey day with more 
thunderboomers forecast for later. 


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Re: [lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread lacelady
There are ways to make long-lasting rollers, and ways that are shorter lived.  
The best rollers, and long lasting, are made from wool fabric, rolled around a 
supporting dowel.  They need to be just deeper than the length of pins to be 
used.  Thick sections of cotton fabric would be hard to pin into.

To temporarily extend the life of a foam roller, a few rounds of wool on top of 
the foam should add a bit of time.  The pins wouldn't go as far into the foam 
so it would take longer to break down.  However, I think it's more time 
effective to make a good roller from the start.

The super-dense foam used in the UK will last longer than standard styrofoam 
but not as long as ethafoam used in the USA.  However, in the USA I've found 
some rollers being made from the foam used for swimming pool toys (pool 
noodles).  These don't last any time at all.  They are nice for a one-time 
project, but not for repeated use.  Test the wool by making a thick pad and 
poking it with a pin.  The pin should go in easily but be held firmly in place, 
no wiggling.

It's possible to disassemble a roller carefully, remove the outside covering, 
and replace the inside material.  I did it on one roller.  I just cut strips 
from an old wool jacket.  I never thought about felting it.  It should be a 
tightly woven wool fabric. Shrinking the wool would make it denser. As long as 
the wool moths stay out of it, a wool roller should last a life time.

Polystyrene develops a hole whenever a pin goes in it.  Hundreds of pinholes 
will break down the surface of the foam.  One company who makes foam pillows 
will put a layer of dust of some sort on the top of the foam, under the cover.  
The theory is that the dust will filter into the holes and fill them up, at 
least for a while...thus extending the life of the pillow.  The fact of life 
with polystyrene is that it has a limited working life.  When the working 
surface gets broken down, the pillow needs replaced.  There's no way to 
refurbish it.

(I wish the ethafoam pillows were available to everyone.  I've been using one 
for 18 years and it's still going strong.  With ethafoam, the holes close up 
when the pin is pulled out.  It takes many years to wear down the working 
surface.)

Life of the roller could be extended a bit by working patterns that have fewer 
pinholes (Torchon rather than Bucks) so there are fewer holes made per square 
inch.  Also, use different areas of the roller, not always just the very center 
section.  This is a very temporary solution.

Have fun with your travel pillow.
Alice

- Original Message -
From: Sue hurwitz...@btinternet.com

I have read in the past of the various ways that people help preserve the
surface of a roller pillow... this one I would suspect is polystyrene with
very light wood ends.  
I have lots of white cotton fabric I could cut a strip off and wrap around if
that would help.  What depth would I need to use save the polystyrene from
going soft which is what has happened with my block pillows.  I think I
remember reading about shrinking the fabric first?

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[lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread Lorelei Halley
Sue
The first thing to consider about recovering your roller is: how does it fit
into the well hole in your pillow?  If you roller sits in a well you won't be
able to add more padding to the roller and still have it fit in the hole.

But if that isn't a problem (if the well is considerably larger than the
existing roller), then to pad the roller you need cloth or padding that takes
pins easily.  I have found that woven cotton fabric many layers thick is
actually quite resistant to pins.  They won't go in far enough to be stable
and you will bend a lot of them.  I have found that 100% woven wool fabric
takes pins very well and is my preferred padding for an area which will take
pins.  Ideally the padding should equal 3/4 of the length of the pins you are
likely to use so that the pins won't go into the styrofoam at all.  I haven't
tried cotton or polyesther batting.  Possibly several layers of cotton quilt
batting would work.  But I would take a pin to the quilt store and test it --
try sticking the pin through several layers of batting to see how it feels.
(The staff might come running to the defense of their batts, so you'll have to
be sneaky.)

The other possibility is that when the styrafoam roller becomes dished and
pitted from use, just discard it and replace it with a thickish dowel wrapped
tightly in wool fabric.  But you will have 6 months to a year of use before
this happens.  My website has a page on making wool pillows with a wool
wrapped dowel roller.
http://lynxlace.com/makeapillow.html

Lorelei Halley

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Re: [lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread Sue Babbs
I was given two used Swedish pillows, where the rollers were too soft to 
hold the pins. I use a single layer of a foam sheet, cut to size and pinned 
to fit.


http://www.michaels.com/Creatology%E2%84%A2-Foam-Sheets/gc1328,default,pd.html?start=16cgid=products-generalcrafts-foam

I would guess that you could get this in a craft store in the UK. it costs 
around $1 / sheet here in America. So is a very inexpensive solution, and 
seems to last a long time. I have been many times round the roller and the 
foam sheet is still in good condition (and won't be cheap or difficult to 
replace when I need to do that)


Sue

sueba...@comcast.net

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Re: [lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread Adele Shaak
Hi Everybody:

  I have found that woven cotton fabric many layers thick is
 actually quite resistant to pins.  They won't go in far enough to be stable
 and you will bend a lot of them.  I have found that 100% woven wool fabric
 takes pins very well

I want to add that you should use loosely-woven wool fabric. I made one roller 
pillow with loosely-woven cloth - works great. I have another that I made with 
tightly-wrapped melton cloth, and no pin will go into it. It's just too solid.


Adele
North Vancouver, BC
(west coast of Canada)

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RE: [lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread Dona Bushong
I just recently completed a roller pillow.  I used a dowel rod for the
center then wrapped 100% wool felt strips around the dowel until it was the
size I wanted.  The 100% wool felt is more expensive than that mixed with
polyester but I think the 100% works better.  I found the wool on sale and
had a coupon to boot so it wasn't too bad.
I've been making lots of yardage lately.  I don't even bother with making
the pricking into a ring.  I keep several prickings at hand and when I'm at
the last repeat on the pricking that's on my pillow, I lay another on top
for that first repeat.  As the roller progresses and the pins come out of
the lace and pricking, the pricking underneath comes out and waits for the
next round. 

Dona in Guam where the seas are calm today.  Might have to get in a dive or
two...

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Re: [lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread L.Snyder

Be careful of cotton batting!
I tried to make a pin cushion of several layers of a cotton mattress 
pad, and pins would not go through it! It was solid. Maybe this was 
because it was old and compacted? I don't know. I went for poly instead.

Lauren


On 8/15/2011 4:22 PM, Jane Partridge wrote:
In message 
sig.520834abff.8544B1EE531A409D87EAE4432FCB378C@loreleihalley, 
Lorelei Halley lhal...@bytemeusa.com writes

I haven't
tried cotton or polyesther batting.  Possibly several layers of 
cotton quilt
batting would work.  But I would take a pin to the quilt store and 
test it --
try sticking the pin through several layers of batting to see how it 
feels.


Cotton batting might work OK, but I can remember the advice against 
using polyester stuffing for pin cushions due to the effect it has on 
the pins - can't remember if it is just dulling or blunting as well - 
in which case use in a pillow would be equally bad for them.


I suspect that it would be possible to purchase a second roller for 
the travel pillow - do they not use the size of roller that fits into 
a block pillow? - if so, then I would buy and use two rollers 
alternately to even out the wear - doing this has certainly extended 
the life of my block pillow blocks, which I have had for donkey's 
years and not had to replace yet - with no additional padding!


The travel roller pillow I use most is a Finnish one, which the roller 
is made from tightly rolled carpet underlay (the recycled foam type) - 
and is showing no sign of retaining its holes or wearing out, despite 
a large amount of use over the last seven or eight years (I bought it 
the year the OIDFA congress was at Nottingham).




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Re: [lace] Roller pillow

2011-08-15 Thread robinlace
The rollers I've made for pillows used the fibrous-type carpet padding.  That's 
getting harder to find, more and more carpet stores sell only the foam rubber 
type.  The short ends should be cut at an angle (taper the material) so that 
there are no ridges where the padding starts and stops.  The rug padding is a 
lot thicker than wool blankets, so it doesn't take as much tedious winding.  
Then a relatively short strip of wool blanket over the padding and a cover.  
The fibrous padding holds the pins well and is easily penetrated by them.

Robin P.
Los Angeles, California, USA
robinl...@socal.rr.com

 lacel...@frontier.com wrote: 
There are ways to make long-lasting rollers, and ways that are shorter lived.  
The best rollers, and long lasting, are made from wool fabric, rolled around a 
supporting dowel.  They need to be just deeper than the length of pins to be 
used.  Thick sections of cotton fabric would be hard to pin into.

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Re: [lace] roller pillow plans

2009-09-17 Thread Clay Blackwell

Hi Dona -

When I (or I should say, my DH) built my first roller pillow, we used 
Pamela Nottingham's description of constructing a French roller pillow 
as our guide, but scaled it up to make a larger pillow, very similar to 
the size of Toustou's large roller pillow.  The way we secured the 
roller was by using a wedge which was pressed into place on one side of 
the roller, between the wooded edge of the roller and the side of the 
roller box.  It doesn't take a lot of pressure to put it in place, and 
it holds very well.  An advantage to this is that it's easy to take out 
when you want to shift the roller a bit, or take it out of the pillow 
altogether.


Your DH could also get creative and do some chip-carving on it to make 
it really attractive!!


The book, Kloppel/Kissen/Stander (now out of print) has lots of 
pictures of lovely old pillows from European countries.  There are 
numerous ways that rollers are held in place illustrated in this book.  
One which I find particularly elegant is a Danish pillow which has a 
notched section on one end and is held in place by a bit of wood which 
is secured to the back of the pillow.  The wood is just flexible enough 
to bend outward enough to release the roller when you want it to turn.  
I will send you a picture of this in a separate email!


Clay

Dona B. wrote:

Good evening.  The list has been very quiet the last few days so after a
conversation with my husband this evening discussing roller pillows, I
thought I'd ask the list for input.  I have a roller pillow that I made 11
years or so ago using Doris Southard's pattern.  It's been a nice pillow to
work on but I've figured out a few things I'd like to change.  One being I'd
prefer a cut out in the back of the pillow for the roller to sit in as
opposed to the box it sits in now.  The second, I'd like a different way to
secure the roller.  I have a hole cut out in the back of the wooden box to
place a long hat pin through and into the roller but it is covered by the
padding.  Not always easy to find if the pin gets taken completely out.
I've at times resorted to using a length of braid that I pin to the pillow
and then to the roller.  I'm looking at a more permanent way to secure the
roller similar to that used on a weaving loom with a cogged wheel but can't
figure what or where I'd place something to hold each notch.  Are there any
good plans for making such a roller pillow?  I've not found any in my
searches on Google.  Or are there some good photos of a roller pillow with
such a feature?  I've found photos of Simon Toustou's lovely pillows but
can't tell if one of the ends of the roller is notched or not.
I have a husband who enjoys and is good at woodworking who currently has
space with a workshop set up and the time to play.  It's a win-win situation
if he's gets to play with his wood and tools and I get a new pillow. :-)  
Dona Bushong in Groton, CT where it's turned quite cool tonight.


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[lace] roller pillow plans

2009-09-16 Thread Dona B.
Good evening.  The list has been very quiet the last few days so after a
conversation with my husband this evening discussing roller pillows, I
thought I'd ask the list for input.  I have a roller pillow that I made 11
years or so ago using Doris Southard's pattern.  It's been a nice pillow to
work on but I've figured out a few things I'd like to change.  One being I'd
prefer a cut out in the back of the pillow for the roller to sit in as
opposed to the box it sits in now.  The second, I'd like a different way to
secure the roller.  I have a hole cut out in the back of the wooden box to
place a long hat pin through and into the roller but it is covered by the
padding.  Not always easy to find if the pin gets taken completely out.
I've at times resorted to using a length of braid that I pin to the pillow
and then to the roller.  I'm looking at a more permanent way to secure the
roller similar to that used on a weaving loom with a cogged wheel but can't
figure what or where I'd place something to hold each notch.  Are there any
good plans for making such a roller pillow?  I've not found any in my
searches on Google.  Or are there some good photos of a roller pillow with
such a feature?  I've found photos of Simon Toustou's lovely pillows but
can't tell if one of the ends of the roller is notched or not.
I have a husband who enjoys and is good at woodworking who currently has
space with a workshop set up and the time to play.  It's a win-win situation
if he's gets to play with his wood and tools and I get a new pillow. :-)  
Dona Bushong in Groton, CT where it's turned quite cool tonight.

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[lace] roller pillow on ebay

2004-08-11 Thread Weronika Patena
Hi everyone,
A roller pillow just appeared on ebay!
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemcategory=19158item=8124429573
rd=1
I don't think I really want one, but other people might be interested.

Weronika

--
Weronika Patena
Caltech, Pasadena, CA, USA
http://vole.stanford.edu/weronika

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Re: [lace] roller pillow on ebay

2004-08-11 Thread Ruth Budge
I make this comment simply to clarify language/terminology differences between
the various countries:  This is what the English call a bolster pillow.   A
roller pillow usually has a much smaller roller inserted in some sort of a flat
surface, such as round (or cookie) pillow, or part thereof.

Ruth Budge (Sydney, Australia)

Weronika Patena [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:Hi everyone,
A roller pillow just appeared on ebay!
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemcategory=19158item=8124429573
rd=1
I don't think I really want one, but other people might be interested.

Weronika

--
Weronika Patena
Caltech, Pasadena, CA, USA
http://vole.stanford.edu/weronika

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Re: [lace] roller pillow on ebay

2004-08-11 Thread Weronika Patena
This one is actually inserted in a big square surface - you can see it on the
other pictures. The seller just picked a bad picture to display on the item
list, since this picture doesn't show all of the pillow, but is a close-up or
the small roller. 
A bolster pillow is just a big cylindrical one that's not inserted in anything,
right? 

Weronika

On Thu, Aug 12, 2004 at 02:46:49PM +1000, Ruth Budge wrote:
 I make this comment simply to clarify language/terminology differences 
between
 the various countries: This is what the English call a bolster pillow. A
 roller pillow usually has a much smaller roller inserted in some sort of a 
flat
 surface, such as round (or cookie) pillow, or part thereof.
 
 Ruth Budge (Sydney, Australia)

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[lace] Roller pillow

2004-06-17 Thread Cherry Knobloch
While visiting my Physical therapist a couple weeks ago, I noticed they 
have ethafoam cylinders! Of course, I had to squeeze one! It felt denser 
than the swim noodles. The Therapist gave me a copy of the catalog. 
The  cylinders aren't so very pricey but the shipping is. They come in 3, 4 
and 6 inch diameters, 36 inches long so there is plenty to share and split 
costs. I paid about $25 for a 4 by 36 inch roll. ( I also got a 
professional discount since I'm a nurse) For anyone interested, the phone 
number is 1 800-323-5547. They have a web site, 
http://www.sammonspreston.com/rehabCat.htm but you can't view the catalog 
from it, although you can order a catalog.

Cherry
Silken Web Lacemakers
Camp Hill, Pa USA
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RE: [lace] Roller pillow

2003-06-29 Thread Lori Howe
And for more information on Pillows including Rollers check here:
http://lace.lacefairy.com/PillowsBobbins/BobbinPillows.html

Lori the Lacefairy 
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[lace] Roller pillow

2003-06-28 Thread Cherre Bybee
Hello all,
I have a student wanting to buy a roller pillow.  Any suggestions on where 
to go?

Thank you,
Cherre
Galena, MO
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Re: [lace] Roller pillow

2003-06-28 Thread Kenn Van-Dieren
Cherre Bybee wrote -
 I have a student wanting to buy a roller pillow.  Any suggestions on where
to go? 

Hi Cherre,

Obviously it depends on how much she would like to spend on it but there are
choices.
Snowgoose sells a foam bases unit called the One and Only that can convert
from cookie to roller at
http://www.snowgoose.cc/cgi-bin/miva?Merchant2/merchant.mv+Screen=PRODStore
_Code=SProduct_Code=O3Category_Code=P1

Lacy Susan sells the same pillow already covered at
http://www.lacysusan.com/Pillows/pillows.html

Tracy at The Lacemaker carries some nice roller pillows.  The web site is
currently being redone but you can contact her at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I also sell a medium priced pillow at
http://www.bobbinmaker.com/rollerpillow.html

***
Kenn Van-Dieren
Bobbins by Van-Dieren
2304 Clifford Avenue
Rochester, NY 14609-3825
Tel: 585.654.5711
Cell: 585.750.8842
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web Site: www.bobbinmaker.com
*
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