Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

2016-02-27 Thread Lavolta Press
Thanks. It had better be. We've been working on it for almost 7 months 
already.


Fran

On 2/27/2016 11:46 AM, Sharon Collier wrote:

Your home is going to be lovely!
Sharon

-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Lavolta Press
Sent: Saturday, February 27, 2016 11:35 AM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

We saw the Hoot Judkins, but the quality is not as good as Barn Furniture
and Amish Direct. Both the latter places will cut deals. About 10-15% off
and free shipping is the range.

Fran

On 2/27/2016 11:09 AM, Sharon Collier wrote:

Good to know. I've seen Amish made furniture at the local Hoot
Judkins. It's lovely, but as you say, very pricey.  Good luck with the

hunt.

Sharon


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Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

2016-02-27 Thread Sharon Collier
Your home is going to be lovely!
Sharon

-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Lavolta Press
Sent: Saturday, February 27, 2016 11:35 AM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

We saw the Hoot Judkins, but the quality is not as good as Barn Furniture
and Amish Direct. Both the latter places will cut deals. About 10-15% off
and free shipping is the range.

Fran

On 2/27/2016 11:09 AM, Sharon Collier wrote:
> Good to know. I've seen Amish made furniture at the local Hoot 
> Judkins. It's lovely, but as you say, very pricey.  Good luck with the
hunt.
> Sharon
>

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Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

2016-02-27 Thread Lavolta Press
We saw the Hoot Judkins, but the quality is not as good as Barn 
Furniture and Amish Direct. Both the latter places will cut deals. About 
10-15% off and free shipping is the range.


Fran

On 2/27/2016 11:09 AM, Sharon Collier wrote:

Good to know. I've seen Amish made furniture at the local Hoot Judkins. It's
lovely, but as you say, very pricey.  Good luck with the hunt.
Sharon



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Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses--a fabric

2016-02-27 Thread Sharon Collier
That is lovely stuff. And the price is great. If you have a shower, you
could use this as an outer curtain;whatever color the inner, waterproof one
was would show off the pattern nicely. Or, as you said, historic dresses.
(in my spare time).

-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Lavolta Press
Sent: Saturday, February 27, 2016 9:52 AM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses--a fabric

BTW, I wanted curtain fabric by the yard because this house has six basic
sizes of windows, plus a few outliers, and the architect had no problem with
putting two or three sizes, shapes, and placements of windows in one room. I
ended up buying lace drapes from all four of the historic lace drape sellers
I mentioned, plus a heap of unused Quaker lace drapes from eBay.  But, back
when I was searching for an all-natural fabric that would give me a uniform
look on the sheer drapes, I bought some of this from the Etsy seller
FabricTreasury:

https://www.etsy.com/listing/123909862/sheer-cotton-curtain-fabric-unbleache
d?ref=shop_home_feat_2

This is a very thin, good-quality, 100% cotton muslin suitable for a variety
of historic dresses. The seller has several other woven patterns of it and
as she points out, it can be dyed. I tested shrinkage and it shrinks a lot,
so thorough preshrinking is essential.  It's the kind of fabric you could
pull through a wedding ring and it will be a pain to sew.  I decided on hand
sewing as being overall less trouble than machine sewing over tissue paper.
Then decided not to use this fabric right now because I already have to sew
all the outer drapes; the seller took all their window coverings.  Maybe
I'll use it for sheer drape replacements. Anyway it's nice fabric at a good
price.

Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
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Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

2016-02-27 Thread Sharon Collier
Good to know. I've seen Amish made furniture at the local Hoot Judkins. It's
lovely, but as you say, very pricey.  Good luck with the hunt. 
Sharon

-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Lavolta Press
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2016 10:29 PM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

We're not looking for used furniture (unless you know someone with some
great antiques).  We'll just get the patio furniture we want to begin with,
and buy it in Sacramento or by mail order and have it delivered. 
It's true Sacramento summers are so hot people seem to spend a lot of time
outdoors, but we won't move for weeks. We're still waiting for the Amish
indoor furniture we had made to be delivered. We ordered from two
distributors and they both take 12-14 weeks from the order date to deliver.
BTW, Amish-built furniture is the way to go if you want new Arts & Crafts
furniture. We bought a lot of great Arts & Crafts and Art Nouveau antique
furniture in the 1980s. But we needed more for a larger house, and
discovered that Arts & Crafts is out of style these days. 
Hardly any local antique stores have it.

These are the distributors we bought from:

http://www.barnfurnituremart.com/

http://amishdirectfurniture.com/

We haven't seen any of our furniture yet, but Barn Furniture Mart is in LA.
My husband flew down there to look at the display furniture in the store and
was very impressed with their quality. All the Amish outdoor furniture,
though, is rough, rustic picnic tables and that sort of thing.

Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com











On 2/26/2016 9:44 PM, Sharon Collier wrote:
> Around here, we have an email group called Next Door. There may be one 
> in your area. Also, have you checked Craigslist?  If you want, I can 
> put out a request for aluminum patio furniture. (I'm in Redwood City, 
> have friends who live in Sacramento.) Also, IKEA has some metal 
> furniture that you might find acceptable. Table and 2 chairs for$99. A 
> stand-in, maybe until you find the stuff you really like.
> Sharon C.
>
> -Original Message-
> From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] 
> On Behalf Of Lavolta Press
> Sent: Friday, February 26, 2016 7:59 PM
> To: Historical Costume
> Subject: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses
>
> Looking for lace curtains for our Sacramento house (which we are 
> decorating in Arts & Crafts style) has been a pain in the tail because 
> lace curtains are very much out of style.  I was unable to find any 
> cotton lace drapery fabric with an overall, antique-looking pattern. 
> And very little lace fabric at all, just sheers with modern patterns that
scream synthetic.
>
> However, I've found a number of pricey but authentic-looking sources 
> for old-house curtains:
>
> * J. R. Burrows, as previously suggested on this list 
> http://www.burrows.com/lace.html
>
> * Olde Worlde Lace
> http://www.oldeworldelace.com/
>
> * London Lace
> http://www.londonlace.com/
>
> * Albert Rackstand Lace on Etsy
> https://www.etsy.com/shop/AlbertRackstandLace?section_id=16135864=
> shopse
> ction_leftnav_9
>
> In addition I recommend trolling eBay and Etsy for:
>
> * Quaker Lace curtains. A hugely popular 20th-century brand, so you 
> can still find 100% or at least 75% cotton lace curtains for sale in 
> their original packages.
>
> * Quaker Lace tablecloths. Denser laces but usable, and often 
> available for low prices.  Try and stay away from the thicker ones made in
the 1960s.
>
> * Knotted lace tablecloths.  Also known as darned net, lacis, and 
> sellers may even call it crochet or bobbin lace or still other terms.
> Whatever:  These are 100% natural fiber, sturdy, and very handsome. 
> They probably date from the 1940s, give or take some years. Patterns 
> can be either geometric or flowing.  I don't like the geometric ones 
> as much, but it's easier to find matching tablecloths in the geometric
patterns.
>
> The difficulty is finding two tablecloths with the same pattern and 
> especially, in *exactly the same shade of white or off-white*. But for 
> rooms with single windows, the tablecloth solution can be a handsome 
> and economical way to go.
>
> For non-lace fabric, I recommend Restoration Fabrics and Trims:
>
> *
> http://www.restorationfabricsandtrims.com/store.html#ecwid:category=19
> 4227
> ode=category=0=normal
>
> Also plain linens available from:
>
> * http://www.fabrics-store.com/ and also, various discount home-dec
stores.
> One of my projects is to stencil some linen drapes.
>
> And silks, from:
>
> * http://www.silkbaron.com
>
> * http://www.hyenaproductions.com/
>
> * And an eBay seller with three ID

Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses--a fabric

2016-02-27 Thread Lavolta Press
BTW, I wanted curtain fabric by the yard because this house has six 
basic sizes of windows, plus a few outliers, and the architect had no 
problem with putting two or three sizes, shapes, and placements of 
windows in one room. I ended up buying lace drapes from all four of the 
historic lace drape sellers I mentioned, plus a heap of unused Quaker 
lace drapes from eBay.  But, back when I was searching for an 
all-natural fabric that would give me a uniform look on the sheer 
drapes, I bought some of this from the Etsy seller FabricTreasury:


https://www.etsy.com/listing/123909862/sheer-cotton-curtain-fabric-unbleached?ref=shop_home_feat_2

This is a very thin, good-quality, 100% cotton muslin suitable for a 
variety of historic dresses. The seller has several other woven patterns 
of it and as she points out, it can be dyed. I tested shrinkage and it 
shrinks a lot, so thorough preshrinking is essential.  It's the kind of 
fabric you could pull through a wedding ring and it will be a pain to 
sew.  I decided on hand sewing as being overall less trouble than 
machine sewing over tissue paper. Then decided not to use this fabric 
right now because I already have to sew all the outer drapes; the seller 
took all their window coverings.  Maybe I'll use it for sheer drape 
replacements. Anyway it's nice fabric at a good price.


Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com
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h-costume mailing list
h-costume@mail.indra.com
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Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

2016-02-26 Thread Lavolta Press
We're not looking for used furniture (unless you know someone with some 
great antiques).  We'll just get the patio furniture we want to begin 
with, and buy it in Sacramento or by mail order and have it delivered. 
It's true Sacramento summers are so hot people seem to spend a lot of 
time outdoors, but we won't move for weeks. We're still waiting for the 
Amish indoor furniture we had made to be delivered. We ordered from two 
distributors and they both take 12-14 weeks from the order date to 
deliver. BTW, Amish-built furniture is the way to go if you want new 
Arts & Crafts furniture. We bought a lot of great Arts & Crafts and Art 
Nouveau antique furniture in the 1980s. But we needed more for a larger 
house, and discovered that Arts & Crafts is out of style these days. 
Hardly any local antique stores have it.


These are the distributors we bought from:

http://www.barnfurnituremart.com/

http://amishdirectfurniture.com/

We haven't seen any of our furniture yet, but Barn Furniture Mart is in 
LA. My husband flew down there to look at the display furniture in the 
store and was very impressed with their quality. All the Amish outdoor 
furniture, though, is rough, rustic picnic tables and that sort of thing.


Fran
Lavolta Press
www.lavoltapress.com











On 2/26/2016 9:44 PM, Sharon Collier wrote:

Around here, we have an email group called Next Door. There may be one in
your area. Also, have you checked Craigslist?  If you want, I can put out a
request for aluminum patio furniture. (I'm in Redwood City, have friends who
live in Sacramento.) Also, IKEA has some metal furniture that you might
find acceptable. Table and 2 chairs for$99. A stand-in, maybe until you find
the stuff you really like.
Sharon C.

-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Lavolta Press
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2016 7:59 PM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

Looking for lace curtains for our Sacramento house (which we are decorating
in Arts & Crafts style) has been a pain in the tail because lace curtains
are very much out of style.  I was unable to find any cotton lace drapery
fabric with an overall, antique-looking pattern. And very little lace fabric
at all, just sheers with modern patterns that scream synthetic.

However, I've found a number of pricey but authentic-looking sources for
old-house curtains:

* J. R. Burrows, as previously suggested on this list
http://www.burrows.com/lace.html

* Olde Worlde Lace
http://www.oldeworldelace.com/

* London Lace
http://www.londonlace.com/

* Albert Rackstand Lace on Etsy
https://www.etsy.com/shop/AlbertRackstandLace?section_id=16135864=shopse
ction_leftnav_9

In addition I recommend trolling eBay and Etsy for:

* Quaker Lace curtains. A hugely popular 20th-century brand, so you can
still find 100% or at least 75% cotton lace curtains for sale in their
original packages.

* Quaker Lace tablecloths. Denser laces but usable, and often available for
low prices.  Try and stay away from the thicker ones made in the 1960s.

* Knotted lace tablecloths.  Also known as darned net, lacis, and sellers
may even call it crochet or bobbin lace or still other terms.
Whatever:  These are 100% natural fiber, sturdy, and very handsome. They
probably date from the 1940s, give or take some years. Patterns can be
either geometric or flowing.  I don't like the geometric ones as much, but
it's easier to find matching tablecloths in the geometric patterns.

The difficulty is finding two tablecloths with the same pattern and
especially, in *exactly the same shade of white or off-white*. But for rooms
with single windows, the tablecloth solution can be a handsome and
economical way to go.

For non-lace fabric, I recommend Restoration Fabrics and Trims:

*
http://www.restorationfabricsandtrims.com/store.html#ecwid:category=194227
ode=category=0=normal

Also plain linens available from:

* http://www.fabrics-store.com/ and also, various discount home-dec stores.
One of my projects is to stencil some linen drapes.

And silks, from:

* http://www.silkbaron.com

* http://www.hyenaproductions.com/

* And an eBay seller with three IDs:  brocadeandmore, exclusive_silks, and
pure_silks.

And, um, I'm using some tone-on-tone Renaissance brocade from my fabric
stash.  Look, the Victorians would have done it!

Now I'm beating my brains out over finding the patio furniture.
Specifically a dining set with a round table, and garden benches. There is a
brand called Oakland Living that has great-looking, other-metal-colored
aluminum pieces that imitate wrought iron.
Unfortunately, they have terrible reviews for quality. I'm not a fan of teak
(or any other wood) for outdoors. When new it looks gorgeous, but it
involves too much upkeep if you want it to stay gorgeous. Wrought iron
rusts, and plastic/resin wicker might work but might blow over.
Aluminum seems like a good idea but all I see is relentlessly modern in

Re: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

2016-02-26 Thread Sharon Collier
Around here, we have an email group called Next Door. There may be one in
your area. Also, have you checked Craigslist?  If you want, I can put out a
request for aluminum patio furniture. (I'm in Redwood City, have friends who
live in Sacramento.) Also, IKEA has some metal furniture that you might
find acceptable. Table and 2 chairs for$99. A stand-in, maybe until you find
the stuff you really like.
Sharon C. 

-Original Message-
From: h-costume-boun...@indra.com [mailto:h-costume-boun...@indra.com] On
Behalf Of Lavolta Press
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2016 7:59 PM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: [h-cost] Curtains for old houses

Looking for lace curtains for our Sacramento house (which we are decorating
in Arts & Crafts style) has been a pain in the tail because lace curtains
are very much out of style.  I was unable to find any cotton lace drapery
fabric with an overall, antique-looking pattern. And very little lace fabric
at all, just sheers with modern patterns that scream synthetic.

However, I've found a number of pricey but authentic-looking sources for
old-house curtains:

* J. R. Burrows, as previously suggested on this list
http://www.burrows.com/lace.html

* Olde Worlde Lace
http://www.oldeworldelace.com/

* London Lace
http://www.londonlace.com/

* Albert Rackstand Lace on Etsy
https://www.etsy.com/shop/AlbertRackstandLace?section_id=16135864=shopse
ction_leftnav_9

In addition I recommend trolling eBay and Etsy for:

* Quaker Lace curtains. A hugely popular 20th-century brand, so you can
still find 100% or at least 75% cotton lace curtains for sale in their
original packages.

* Quaker Lace tablecloths. Denser laces but usable, and often available for
low prices.  Try and stay away from the thicker ones made in the 1960s.

* Knotted lace tablecloths.  Also known as darned net, lacis, and sellers
may even call it crochet or bobbin lace or still other terms. 
Whatever:  These are 100% natural fiber, sturdy, and very handsome. They
probably date from the 1940s, give or take some years. Patterns can be
either geometric or flowing.  I don't like the geometric ones as much, but
it's easier to find matching tablecloths in the geometric patterns.

The difficulty is finding two tablecloths with the same pattern and
especially, in *exactly the same shade of white or off-white*. But for rooms
with single windows, the tablecloth solution can be a handsome and
economical way to go.

For non-lace fabric, I recommend Restoration Fabrics and Trims:

*
http://www.restorationfabricsandtrims.com/store.html#ecwid:category=194227
ode=category=0=normal

Also plain linens available from:

* http://www.fabrics-store.com/ and also, various discount home-dec stores.
One of my projects is to stencil some linen drapes.

And silks, from:

* http://www.silkbaron.com

* http://www.hyenaproductions.com/

* And an eBay seller with three IDs:  brocadeandmore, exclusive_silks, and
pure_silks.

And, um, I'm using some tone-on-tone Renaissance brocade from my fabric
stash.  Look, the Victorians would have done it!

Now I'm beating my brains out over finding the patio furniture. 
Specifically a dining set with a round table, and garden benches. There is a
brand called Oakland Living that has great-looking, other-metal-colored
aluminum pieces that imitate wrought iron. 
Unfortunately, they have terrible reviews for quality. I'm not a fan of teak
(or any other wood) for outdoors. When new it looks gorgeous, but it
involves too much upkeep if you want it to stay gorgeous. Wrought iron
rusts, and plastic/resin wicker might work but might blow over. 
Aluminum seems like a good idea but all I see is relentlessly modern in
style. I'm also not a fan of super-deep or super-low seats in any material.

Any suggestions?

Fran
Lavolta Press
Books on historic clothing
www.lavoltapress.com
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