Sponsored by TWIST - Tablet Weavers International Studies & Techniques
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >I don't think you have to go wide for lettering. Agreed. My latest 32-tablet bookmarks fit in lettering and borders. Linda was referring to her book of double-faced patterns which are pictorial, not lettering, and are 48 and 56 tablets wide. >The whole piece that I made for the TWIST exchange is at >http://www.geocities.com/oakenking/Chaucer.jpg I was lucky enough to get one of the pieces of that, an it definitely looks much better in real life. 8-) >I >worked up a really tiny one for 10 for one of my beginning classes Any chance of sharing that one with us? Although I don't teach classes, I do sometimes help out individual beginners, and that sounds as though it would be useful. >I missed the post before Linda's reply to Jenny I haven't seen any reply to mine other than your one, so unless you meant Linda's reply to Julie, then I'm missing a post. I love the idea of textual pieces, so I'm grateful to those of you who are planning to share your alphabets. Linda, I know most people most of the time want to have the text written along a narrow band, but one day I'd like to do a wider piece with the text running across it rather than lengthways. Are you considering including an alphabet with the letters in that orientation? -- Jenny Kosarew from England mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Home Page: http://www.whorls.freeserve.co.uk Berkshire Guild Page: http://www.whorls.freeserve.co.uk/guild The Braid Society: http://www.braidsociety.org Send private reply to Jenny Kosarew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ----------------------------------------------------------- To stop receiving tabletweaving (not tabletweaving-digest), send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the message: unsubscribe tabletweaving. To stop receiving tabletweaving-digest, see the end of a digest.
