Lace Event: La Zouch Lace Guild Lace Day – November 13, 2010

La Zouch Lace Guild Lace Day
Date:
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Place:
Packington Village Memorial Hall
Packington, Nr Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leics LE65 1WJ
Time:
10.00 AM UNTIL 4.00 PM

Tickets: £4.00, shoppers 2-4, 50p at the door
Cheques payable to La Zouch Lace Guild, SAE please.
Contact: Mrs Vanessa Bayliss, 47 Marlborough Way,
Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leics LE65 2NN
Tel: 01530 411055

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Lace Event: North Cheshire Lacemakers Lace Day – November 13, 2010

North Cheshire Lacemakers Lace Day
Date:
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Place:
The Community Centre
Lower Robin Hood Lane, Helsby WA6 0BW
Time:
10.00 AM UNTIL 4.00 PM

Speaker: at 1:30

Tickets: £2 members, £3 visitors
Payable at the door, including tea or coffee.
Website:  http://www.nc-lacemakers.co.uk
Tel: 0151 353 8313

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Ebay Alerts! Three Pieces – October 7, 2010

http://tinyurl.com/23t9r38 1850s Point de Gaze LACE Bridal Veil ~ Museum Piece
Starting price:
$100.00 with reserve.
Auction ends: Oct 13, 2010 15:59:01 PDT
Offered by: Ebay seller vintageblessings, Beautiful Star, Idaho, USA
Comments: Well, it’s big.

$1,026.99, reserve not met, 6 bidders.

http://tinyurl.com/23hpjzt ANTIQUE LACE GREAT LONG ARGENTAN LACE LAPPETS C1780
Current offer:
$175.00 no bids
Auction ends: Oct 13, 2010 13:01:44 PDT
Offered by: Paivi Roberts, Ebay seller greatlace, Paris and Palm Beach
Comments: Nice, long French needlelace lappets, brides boucles. Good, not terribly innovative. Squared ends unusual for a meshed lace. Very good condition, a nice basic collectible. I’m surprised there isn’t a reserve.

Sold for $355.00.  (very nice price!)

http://tinyurl.com/24v8nwd 3 Beautiful Vintage Tenerife Lace Table Doilies
Current offer:
$22.99 buy-it-now
Offered by: Ebay seller cork123, Cleveland, Ohio
Comments: Drawnwork and needlewoven squares, nicely worked in very fine linen. These small excellent pieces come up now and then, probably early 20th century, perhaps Mexican.  They are some of the best examples available at reasonable prices.

Sold for $22.99

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Lace of the Month: Belgian Needlelace – October 2010

The photo for October 2010 is a 19th century Belgian needlelace border 6″ wide. There are some widely held misconceptions of Belgian needlelace of this period. Too often people think only of the multi-layered rose petals combined with a romantic design, and go no further. Even though quality and condition can vary widely, prices for this Point d’Gaz/Rosepoint tend to be quite predictable- one could almost measure price trends in the lace market in general according to how a meter of the best Rosepoint goes. But Belgian needlelace is so much more in this period, and one can trace a definite progression from the magnificent flat ground pieces of the 18th century. Designers played a lot with the cordonnet, and some of the very best pieces have no raised work at all. The piece illustrated has a good, regular design – one can even discern color changes where different threads were used for various parts of the pattern. The clothwork is surprisingly solid, and a simple, even raised edge surrounds the major motifs. The combination of bride and looped ground is a further mark of innovative design.

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Lace of the Month: 18th Century Valenciennes – September 2010

This is the first header posted for LaceNews, and represents one of my favorite laces. Unfortunately I lost my original posting on this, so am trying to recreate it for the archives. It is an 18th century  Valenciennes border dating from around 1740, 1-1/4″ wide. Valenciennes of this period went through several variations in the ground – at first a snowflake pattern, then the 5-hole ‘cinque trou’ like this one. Later in the century came the round mesh, which eventually gave way to the square mesh of the 19th century. This is one of my favorite laces, and one I consider an absolute high point of bobbinlace making. The  very dense pattern relies on lines of holes formed by twisted pairs to define the images. In laces of this period further relieve is achieved with areas of contrasting half stitch – in the fully developed round mesh laces, only the cloth stitch and ‘line drawing’ technique survives.

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Collecting: Flemish Pottery Lacemakers


Lacemaker by Vande Voorde (1908-1950), Bruges (6-1/4″ high).  This is the most famous of the Flemish potteries, and one of the few documented in a published work. Achille Vande Voorde’s work is characterized by great realism in the features. At least seven lacemakers of different sizes were made by this firm. It isn’t known if he was the first to do the lacemaker figure – but it does appear in his earliest catalog. And, his mother was a lacemaker.

For the next few weeks I will post some Collecting notes on what I consider to be the best lacemaker figures  for various countries. Starting with Belgium – forget the poor little cloth tourist dolls (although their story must eventually be told).  There is a class of figures that does great honor to the Belgian lacemaker, which has been completely ignored in lace literature.

References to Flemish Pottery (information is more commonly found under “Vlaams Aardewerk” in Flemish, or “Poterie Flamande” in French) date back over a thousand years. Bruge was a major center of export. The pottery is a lead-glaze earthenware and is used for household items as well as decorative figures. Note, the lead-glaze is toxic if ingested, but an acceptable substitute that preserves the brilliant colors has not been found. Bruges is known for the ‘Flame method’ glaze, in which colors are painted onto the slip, and form ‘flames’ as they run during firing. A history of this art (in Flemish) can be found at http://www.vlaams-aardewerk-gjm.be/index.html.

Flemish pottery is primarily made in Vlaanderen, the northern part of Belgium in small potteries, often family businesses. Vlaams Aardewerk includes vases, jars, candlesticks, wall pieces, and other traditional forms, as well as many different figures, primarily local crafts people and religious images. The lacemaker is not the only textile-related figure; flax spinning was also modeled.  Occasionally the lacemaker and spinster will be made as a pair. The earliest lacemakers were made around 1900, and I don’t think it is possible to find them earlier. The figures come in many different variations, including raised images on plates.


Extremely rare plate design by Willemeyns, Bruges, 1930-1950 (4″ in diameter). There is an accompanying spinster image.

Among the better makers each piece was individually crafted, resulting in slight variations in similar pieces. Sometime the appendages and furniture were done separately and attached to a larger base – not always perfectly. The base is always hollow, with the actual figure formed from a thinner shell – a thinner piece often indicates a higher quality. Look for differences in the detail of the drapery, and in the placement of the feet around the base of the pillow stand. The best pieces have brilliant colors, good modeling around the hands and bobbins, naturally flowing drapery, and openwork in a well modeled stand and chair. Occasionally one can find a dog or cat under the chair. There is much consistency in this genre among various potters – lacemakers often have an orange shawl and blue cap. All place the pins with the right hand. Photography must also be done with care or a perspective problem develops in which the lower part of the figure seems smaller than the upper part. This normally isn’t the case in the actual figure.


Societé Anonyme de Courtrai, 1910-1920 (9″ tall). A very large, very beautiful piece in excellent condition. Note the dog under the chair.

Many of these figures are not signed, but a few artists can be identified by marks or by general style (how the rutching on the hat is handled is an excellent marker). Modern copies are being made, but it is difficult to attribute date without a known provenance, and frankly, quality is usually high throughout the 20th century. So far, I have found thirteen potteries making the lacemaker, and I am certain there are more to be discovered.


G. J. Monteyne, modern, one of the few signed pieces I have found. (6-1/2″ tall)

The Flemish Pottery lacemaker is very poorly documented, leading to numerous miss-attributions. Sellers often label them as ‘Majolica’, or simply admit their lack of knowledge.  Some attributed examples can be seen in a set of postcards for sale at the Kantcentrum in Bruges: Kantcentrum Postcards. The pottery is very delicate, and the figures are often chipped at the edges, or broken and repaired. The yellow flesh and orange hair takes some getting used to, but overall these figures are absolutely delightful.  Count on paying several hundred dollars for perfect examples, less than $50 for ones in poor condition.


Alfons Nosséda, Courtrai, 1914-1937 (6″ tall). A nice change from the usual orange shawl design.

Left: Pieter Jozef Laignel, Courtrai, 1898-1929 (8″ tall)
Right: Unknown maker (6-1/4″ tall). Might be from Turnhout. The Flemish pottery lacemaker isn’t very easy to find, but this particular figure seems to come up more often than others.

Much work remains to be done to identify the makers of many Flemish Pottery lacemakers.

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Lace Event: Wolds Lacemakers Annual Lace Day – November 13, 2010

Wolds Lacemakers Annual Lace Day
Date:
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Place:
Hessle Town Hall
South Lane, Hessle, East Riding of Yorkshire HU13 0RR
Time:
10.00 AM UNTIL 4.00 PM

Speaker: Stuart Johnson,  “Ramblings of a bobbin maker”
Suppliers:
MAKIT Lacemaking
Tuffnell Glass
Stuart Johnson
Irene Tomlinson

Tickets: £3.50 (cheques payable to ‘Wolds Lacemakers’)
SAE to Mrs J Adkins, 56 Ormonde Avenue,
HULL.  HU6 7LY   Tel: 01482-346123
Parking, and Facilities for the Disabled available
Bring a packed lunch or food available close by
Website:  http://www.woldslacemakers.co.uk

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Lace Event: Border Lacemakers’ Lace Day – November 6, 2010

Border Lacemakers’ Lace Day
Date
: November 6, 2010
Place:
The Beaufort Community Centre, Beaufort Road, Newport NP19 7UB
(off the B4596 Caerleon Road)
TIME: 10:30 AM UNTIL 3:30 PM

SPEAKER: Gabriela The Ukulele Lady

TICKETS £5.00
Cheques payable to ‘Border Lacemakers’,
Jenny Hester, Cedar Bungalow, Clytha Park, Abergavenny NP7 9BW
please include SAE.

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Lace Event: Nottinghamshire Bobbin Lace Society AGM and Lace Day – November 6, 2010

Nottinghamshire Bobbin Lace Society AGM and Lace Day
Date
: November 6, 2010
Place:
St. Jude’s Church Hall
Woodborough Road, Notts NG3 5HE
TIME: 10.00 AM UNTIL 4.00 PM

TICKETS £3.00 members, at the door,   £4.00 non members
Contact – Arlene Garnier, 01400 282830

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Lace Event: Croxley Lacemakers Lace Day – November 6, 2010

Croxley Lacemakers Lace Day
Date
: November 6, 2010
Place:
Harvey Road School
Croxley Green, Herts WD3 3BN

TICKETS £4.00 Young Lacemakers £2.00
Cheques payable to ‘Croxley Lacemakers’,
Elaine Norman, 261 Baldwins Lane, Croxley Green Rickmansworth, Herts WD3 3LH
01923 779331
Please include a SAE

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