Spangle Success!
After that meeting Mark went away with research and ideas. A few weeks later, which was last November, he arrived in the Wardrobe Department with, in Wendy’s words “a battered coffee can under his arm and a big grin on his face!”
The most amazing things tumbled out of that coffee can! Mark had made the tool, a small hole punch, a poker, a pusher and a die! And SPANGLES!!!!!!! They looked like the pictures! What joy!![]()
Here’s Jill again. Since then, Mark and I have talked about how he went about making the spangles. Some of the process is clear from the originals, that they were punched, for example, and from a strip of gilt silver, like a ribbon, not from a big flat piece like a sheet of paper. Some, though, of what he’s done is conjecture. It’s one way to solve the puzzle of how to get this result, not the only way and not necessarily exactly the way
17th-century artisans did it.
Since that day, the trouble has been how & where to get some silver electroplated with gold and rolled to the correct thickness. Mark has solved all those problems, with the help of some new friends. A few weeks ago he and Wendy and Tricia questioned whether the gold layer was thick enough; they solved that too. Friday I got this message from Mark:
Hi Jill,
I have spangle stock in hand and i can have a quantity made for the 29th. I must show you the gilded ribbon it’s cool.
Mark
We are in business.
The next session on March 28 will see Robbin and Carolyn working with the reproduction spangles and the real lace pattern (the repro of the Laton lace, not the equally lovely but not-the-property-of-the-V&A pattern that went out in the kits) to work out any bugs.
I can begin taking real honest & true reservations for the subsequent scheduled sessions. Three lacers who were ready to come in February and got bumped have first dibs, and I will send out an email to them first thing in the morning (unless they see this and get in touch with me first) to find out if they would like to/are able to come for any part of the April 11 -14 session.
The next sessions are:
Friday May 16 – Monday May 19
Friday May 30- Monday June 2
Friday June 20- Monday June 23
If these sessions are not convenient, please call and let me know. I avoided Mothers’ & Fathers’ Day and Memorial Day thinking everyone would have other plans. If your idea of a great holiday is to come make lace, we can work that out. Let me know.
I’ll be scheduling more sessions; we’ll be working through the summer. Don’t worry – the office is air-conditioned and Plymouth has one of the coldest beaches on the Atlantic coast (that’s a good thing). Please feel free to suggest weekends or weekdays in July, August and September that would be good for embroidery or lace making.
We can have two lacers working at a time. Some have asked if they can make lace for one or two days and embroider for the rest of the session. That is absolutely OK, if you do an embroidery sample kit and learn the embroidery procedure. Also, we’ll have the same deal for lacers as for embroiderers, which is that once you’ve come during a session and learned the drill, you can then come anytime, whenever it suits you whether or not we have a scheduled session. Contact Kathy for embroidery and lace kits, kroncarati@plimoth.org or 508-746-1622 X 8114
As always, please contact me with any questions or concerns jhall@plimoth.org or 508-746-1622 X 8119 – and yippee!!
Tags: kit, Lace, Mark, samples, Schedules, sessions, Spangles, Tricia, Wendy





March 17th, 2008 at 9:06 pm
All I can say is YEA!!! And please come!! I’m sure Carolyn and I will have glowing reports once we get to work with the real pattern, but we should have things ready and waiting for lacemakers to jump right in on April 11th. This is a good thing, since I’ll be your expert of the day! And if that isn’t enough to tempt you, what is? Seriously, we’re really excited. I’ve enjoyed every session that I’ve been at and can say that the experience is more than just stitching or making lace; it’s a chance to see behind the scenes, meet other people as interested in the project as you are, and feel like you’re part of something really unique. So do consider coming if you have any chance at all.
Robbin
March 17th, 2008 at 11:45 pm
Ya and Hooo! I can only imagine what this lace will look like. I remember Jill’s post about how the sequins quivered on the lace. Just think with spangles; gold thread, gold spangles, weighted to hang just so…shimmer, quiver, sparkle and shine.
Pretty good for twitty little things. *grin*