Hi All
I make Teneriffe and am about to embark on Nanduti.
They are made differently but look similar.
They come from drawn thread work which is embroidered lace BUT
Teneriffe is made on a circular disc and I have a few that are other
shapes (OK all home made). The base thread is held in
Long...
âThere is some confusion between "soles" , "ruedas" and "Canary's suns",
respect to "Teneriffe roses or suns"...
Originate in Castilla (Spain) 14th. and XVth cent. is the drawnworkâ
called "Soles de Salamanca" (Salamanca's suns), "Soles del Casar" (Casar's
suns), "Soles Canarios"
I’m for “needle-made textile” or “needle-woven textile”.
When I think of “embroidered net” I think of a pre-made net that would stand
alone as a separate textile, with a pattern then embroidered on it. The base of
Tenerife, if you took it off the loom without doing the needleweaving, would
Itâs not embroidered net.
Wheel lace or sol lace, or the specific type such as Nanduti or Tenerife
Brenda
> On 30 Jun 2016, at 16:54, Devon Thein wrote:
>
> What category would you ascribe if you were cataloging a piece of Tenerife
> lace or Spanish Ruedas? Under what
Needle-made or stitched textiles?
On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 8:54 AM, Devon Thein wrote:
> What category would you ascribe if you were cataloging a piece of Tenerife
> lace or Spanish Ruedas? Under what words would you look for it? Would you
> call it "Embroidered Net"?
> ...
What category would you ascribe if you were cataloging a piece of Tenerife
lace or Spanish Ruedas? Under what words would you look for it? Would you
call it "Embroidered Net"?
There is an entire realm of things that are similar to these laces called
names like Lazy Daisys. These are things that