Yes, seeing more of the lace does put a different slant on things, and I agree
with all that Lorelei says. Not typical of anything but probably Dutch/Flemish.
Brenda
> Those photos are very interesting.
Brenda in Allhallows
paternos...@appleshack.com
www.brendapaternoster.co.uk
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Nathalie
Those photos are very interesting. There are a number of things I can say, but
I can't give you a place or time with any confidence.
This page on my website has some which may be pottenkant. That form was made
not only with Paris ground, but sometimes with Flanders ground, torchon
ground,
Dearest Lorelei (and others of course)
Thank you so much for the info. You asked for some close-ups and here they
are. Is that detailed enough? If you have any additional information, I
would be so thankful!
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stevienixed/16445387495/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/stev
Nathalie
It has some unusual features. The motifs are half stitch, the ground is ctt
pin ctt -- which is sometimes called "twisted hole ground". That is the stitch
used in honeycomb ground, but this is not honeycomb ground. Do you have any
shots of a larger section of the piece so we can see the wh
Looking at it again what I originally thought might be raised tallies are more
likely to be a kink in the thread caused by poor tension. That's definitely
not a machine made feature, but as you say to identify lace as machine made you
do need to see the foot edge.
Sent from Brenda's iPad
> On
I would say it is a machine made lace. The borders of the motifs look weird
to me, making me think that they are not made by hand. But I would need to
see a more enlarged picture. Does nobody else think it is machine made?
Best wishes, from Antje in Spain.
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>is anyone able to tell me which type of lace this is?
>I haven't got a clue, so any info is appreciated!
>https://m.flickr.com/#/photos/stevienixed/15811206704
According to Kurella's "Guide to Lace and Linens", this mesh is Maglia de
Spagna, or Spanish Point.
It appears in some Italian and Spanis
Do you also have a photo of a larger section of the lace than just this
detailed area?
Sue
suebabbs...@gmail.com
-Original Message-
From: Brenda Paternoster
Sent: Tuesday, February 3, 2015 4:12 AM
To: Nathalie
Cc: Arachne
Subject: Re: [lace] Identification of a type of lace
I wouldn’t say this is a specific lace type.
On the picture I see half stitch and a ground cross twist twist pin cross
twist twist. It is a straight piece of lace looks as if the thread is very
thick could be the enlarging.
On my picture there is no gimp and no raised tallies. On the second pi
Working methodically through my Pat Earnshaw ID bible - Bobbin & Needle Laces,
Identification and Care:
1, woven/plaited ->21
21, solid motifs, open grounds structured ->23
23, bars or reseau (mesh), it’s reseau so ->31
31, design and ground continuous or non-continuous, it’s continuous so ->
Hello everyone,
is anyone able to tell me which type of lace this is?
I haven't got a clue, so any info is appreciated!
https://m.flickr.com/#/photos/stevienixed/15811206704
Much love
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