Finally finished this filet crochet project of the goddess Hestia!
I'm insanely proud of it and it's currently being blocked
Done with a 1.5mm hook, pen for scale below:
seen from China

seen from Italy

seen from Belarus
seen from China
seen from China
seen from France

seen from Italy

seen from Malaysia
seen from Seychelles
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from Türkiye
seen from Sweden
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Italy
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
Finally finished this filet crochet project of the goddess Hestia!
I'm insanely proud of it and it's currently being blocked
Done with a 1.5mm hook, pen for scale below:
Working a fan with my prized Chris Parsons orchid bobbins with spangles!
Because lace uses so many bobbins at once, individually attached to threads (This collar alone uses 60 threads if I remember correctly?) it's common for lacemakers to collect them. I probably have at least 50 not currently in use. Seasoned lacemakers like to collect special ones to commemorate special days (births, international conventions) or just because they're pretty.
Some members of the guild I volunteer with counted up their bobbins, pillows, tatting shuttles, and other lacemaking tools. One woman in my guild reported over 3000 lace bobbins! Another reported 50 tatting shuttles. Some decided to give some away or sell what they couldn't possibly use.
If you're interested in beginning lacemaking and want secondhand supplies, you could talk to your local International Organization of Lace (IOLI) chapter. You can find a map of chapters on the website. There also may be smaller groups you might find at fiber-related events!
I finally finished this torchon lace border after three years, two house moves, and two prolonged periods of leaving it forgotten in the back of the closet.
I learned so much from this project, and although it isn't perfect by any means, I'm incredibly happy to have finished it.
Learning different rosegrounds! The colors came out a bit funny with how I placed them but I still like it and I definitely fucked something up in the last section but I didn't notice until I was tying it off so oh well 😅😅
Pattern: Sampler 16 Torchon Lacemaking by Jan Tregidgo
Angstober Day 12: Rotten Touch
Cross, twist, cross. Miles of thread to distract from the inevitable.
There are half-undead creatures that go on a single repetitive obsession to keep a semblance of life. They need raw meat to sustain their body from rotting. Bobbin lace is pretty good to keep one going.
(Fun fact, both artist and writer of Riddles in the Dark can do bobbin lace)
Johannes Vermeer The Lacemaker ca.1669-71
So obviously I have to incorporate lacework into my designs for school. This d20 lace piece was my first practice run at making my own pattern. I learned a lot and can’t wait to remake it.
It’ll probably be a piece for the back of a jacket in my Arts and Druidcraft collection.
finally got to coloring this picture from Feb 3, 2019
Lucy Lacemaker from FENNAH