Several years ago I ordered a paperback copy of The Ladies’ Hand Book of Fancy and Ornamental Work by Florence Hartley. It was originally published in 1859. If I had known that it was online, I would have just downloaded it. The contents are the same.
- Netting (page 177)
- Plain Netting (page 178)
- Grecian Netting - with illustration (page 179)
- Plain Open Netting - with illustration (page 179)
- Diamond Netting - with illustration (page 179)
- Diamond Netting, of Five Stitches - with illustration (page 180)
- Netting With Beads - with illustration (page 181)
- Net for the Hair - with illustration (page 182)
- Netted Curtain - with illustration on 183 (page 184)
- Short Purse in Netting - with illustration (page 186)
- Needles (page 188)
* * * * * * * * * * *
Over the years I have re-created 62 different doilies patterns that my grandmother created. She did not write down any instructions; she just made the doilies. She taught me how to "read" a net doily and then make it. These doilies included those she gave me to use as patterns, some my mother owned, one owned by her sister-in-law, Ida Winter, and photocopies of doilies in the possession of her daughter, Elaine.
I finished writing the doily instructions several years ago. At that time, after I finished making the doily, I made a photocopy of as much of it as I could. Often that was just a rectangular section from the center to the edge. Eventually I purchased a digital camera and started taking a photograph of each doily so I could see what the entire doily looked like. Since I had given away most of the doilies I had made, I had to start making them again.
This week I finished Sunburst.
I thought it was the last one I needed to photograph; however, while looking through my patterns, I discovered an additional Pineapple Doily that Grandmother had made. The edges of the two doilies are slightly different, so I guess I have one more doily to finish and photograph before I can say I have digital photographs of all the doilies I have access to that my grandmother designed. To see those I have made, look at Grandmother's Legacy.
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