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Mesh grounded lace is a continuous
bobbin lace Bobbin lace is a lace textile made by braiding and twisting lengths of thread, which are wound on bobbins to manage them. As the work progresses, the weaving is held in place with pins set in a lace pillow, the placement of the pins usually de ...
also known as straight lace. Continuous bobbin lace is made in one piece on a lace pillow. The threads of the ground enter motifs, then leave to join the ground again further down the process, all made in one go. This is different from
part lace Part lace or sectional lace is a way of making bobbin lace. It characterises various styles, such as Honiton lace or Brussels lace. All bobbin lace is made with bobbins on a lace pillow. Some styles of lace are made in a continuous strip. Since th ...
, where the motifs are created separately, then joined together afterwards. Mesh grounded lace is a group of lace types that may look very different but share several common properties.


Classification: Context and sub types of mesh laces

In the middle of the eighteenth century, many laces could be definitely named by their grounds. In 1820–30 lace making was so widespread that names refer to a kind of lace and no longer to the place where it was made. The inherently complex study of lace is further complicated by the use of foreign terms, of alternative terms, and by contradictory usage. Moreover, lace makers have other viewpoints than collectors and curators, so classification is not a black-and-white discussion. The following overview follows a construction point of view that is recognizable when looking into the minute details, but even with this approach the exception proves the rule. * Continuous bobbin lace also known as: straight lace or fil continu. ** Guipure (motives connected with plaits) ** Motives connected with mesh, also known as: net, ground, réseau (French, network) or fond (French, ground). *** A worker pair in the motives, also known as a weaver pair **** Torchon (45° grid),
Freehand Freehand may refer to: * Freehand drawing, a drawing made without the help of devices * Freehand lace, a bobbin lace worked directly onto fabric * , drumming technique * Adobe FreeHand, software package * ''Free Hand'', a 1975 album by Gentle Gian ...
(pins only at the edges) **** Point ground (grid of 52°–70°, usually 60°, never 45° ) *****
Arras Arras ( , ; pcd, Aro; historical nl, Atrecht ) is the prefecture of the Pas-de-Calais Departments of France, department, which forms part of the regions of France, region of Hauts-de-France; before the regions of France#Reform and mergers of ...
,
Bayeux Bayeux () is a Communes of France, commune in the Calvados (department), Calvados Departments of France, department in Normandy (administrative region), Normandy in northwestern France. Bayeux is the home of the Bayeux Tapestry, which depicts ...
, Blonde,
Bucks point Bucks point is a bobbin lace from the South East of England. "Bucks" is short for Buckinghamshire, which was the main centre of production. The lace was also made in the nearby counties of Bedfordshire and Northamptonshire. Bucks point is very si ...
, Chantilly, Tønder, Beveren, Lille *** Two pair per pin ****
Antwerp Antwerp (; nl, Antwerpen ; french: Anvers ; es, Amberes) is the largest city in Belgium by area at and the capital of Antwerp Province in the Flemish Region. With a population of 520,504,
, Mechlin **** Ring pair ***** Binche, Flanders (45°), Paris, Valenciennes


Worker pair versus two pair per pin

Dense areas of lace have the worker pair acting like wefts weaving to and fro, and passive threads hanging downwards, like warps. In point ground, the workers stay in the dense area, and the passives join or leave, one pair per pin (the pins define the pattern). The worker properties also apply to Torchon and Freehand lace. The images below compare fragments of lace with a similar ground. Flanders uses a single pin in the centre of the rectangles, the Torchon Rose ground uses a pin at each edge of the rectangle. The Torchon motif has a weaver in the dense motive, the Flanders motive has no pair making U-turns around pins. File:Flanders-tow-pair-per-pin.jpg, Flanders lace: a single pin (red dot) connects two pairs of the ground with the motif File:Color coded diagram of Flanders lace.png, Color coded diagram of the Flanders sample File:Torchon edge.jpg, Torchon lace: two pins (red dots) connect two pairs of the ground with the motif


Ring pair

The Flanders sample illustrating the two pair per pin principle also shows a ring pair: a pair following the shape of the motive, but unlike the
gimp GIMP ( ; GNU Image Manipulation Program) is a free and open-source raster graphics editor used for image manipulation (retouching) and image editing, free-form drawing, transcoding between different image file formats, and more specialized task ...
it has some distance. File:2 pair per pin.jpg, Another example of a ring pair


Belgian color code

Many pattern books and directions for making lace were printed in the first half of the sixteenth century; but very few were printed after about 1565. Originally skilled lacemakers made samples of new designs that were passed around to less skilled lace makers. At the time this was the only way of learning new designs. To date we have instruction and pattern books with diagrams. As bobbin lace is worked by plaiting or weaving pairs of threads, lines in many diagrams represent pairs, less elaborate to draw and easier to read large sections. Basic lessons or special tricks are explained with thread diagrams. Black and white pair diagrams do not contain enough information to reproduce the intricate mesh laces. The ''Kantnormaalschool'' (School of Lace Teaching) founded in Bruges in 1911 developed a color code. Simply put: where lines cross, a color indicates what to do at that point. The method is commonly accepted and applied in modern pattern books. Especially for mesh laces though other types of lace types may also benefit from the drawing technique.


Corners and joining

Before the mid-nineteenth century, not many corners were designed. For commercial use straight length were cut and rejoined or gathered to fit around a corner. After the First World War lace-making became a craft and manufacturing was no longer and issue. To close a square for a handkerchief, still two parts need to be joined. After overlapping and exactly matching the pattern, stitches are oversewn with a thinner thread that exactly matches the color of the lace. Wherever possible avoid sewing in cloth stitch, in corners and in open ground, in other words: don't sew along a straight line but carefully choose the path for the sewings to make it as little visible as possible. Other methods are needle weaving, and the detour technique with knots or overlapping threads. Image:BrugesKantcentrumBobbinLace.jpg , A Flanders edge reaching an overlapped section for sewing File:Spelden.jpg , Overlapped Flanders lace, repinned to stay in shape and be sewn over (much) later File:Cutting off excess material.jpg, Cutting off excess material of another Flanders exercise File:Torchon-sewing-back.jpg , Mixed Torchon exercise of detour knots and overlapped sewing File:Torchon-sewing-front.jpg , Front of the mixed exercise


References

{{Lace types Bobbin lace