Fabric of lace maker's life wins her awards
By Jeffrey Westhoff -Photo by Ryan Rayburn
Janice Blair's project spreads from a pink pillow. From a miniature
forest of pins flow 160 threads connected to multicolored pencils spread
in a fan-like pattern.
Blair, of Crystal Lake, is making lace. The pencils are called bobbins,
and she manipulates them to create the intricate designs that have won
her several awards.
"People
say, 'How can you do this? It looks so complicated,' " Blair said. "But
you only work with two bobbins at a time."
Plus, there are only two stitches, a cross or a twist. The pattern
is based on where you place the pins and how many twists you make, Blair
said.
The heavier thread that holds the pattern is called "the gimp." The
pattern is called a "pricking," so named because the pin holes are pricked
in advance. "Having the pin hole already there helps you guide the pin
in," Blair said.
The hobby does have hazards. "I break a lot of nails," she said.
Blair spent 250 hours working with 240 bobbins to make a fan filled
with planets and stars that she jokingly named "Traversing the Silver Firmament."
The fan won third place at last year's International Old Lacers Inc. convention
in Indianapolis.
Blair is working on her entry for this year's convention, scheduled
for August in Tulsa, Okla., but she doesn't want any rival lacers to know
what it is. "It's deadly secret until July," she said.
Blair speaks with a soft English accent. She and her family once lived
in Cleveland, England, and moved to America in 1981.
Blair will return to England in July to exchange bobbins with other
lacers - lacers exchange bobbins the way other people exchange business
cards. Blair has a collection of bobbins from around the world. "Very generous
people, lacemakers," she said.
But lacemaking is not a craft she brought from Europe. She started
in 1994 for "the challenge of trying it" with a mail-order lacemaking kit.
"It was a terrible kit," she said, "with plastic bobbins." But Blair didn't
give up, and learned lacemaking from the book "Introduction to Bobbin Lace"
by Rosemary Shepherd.
The book listed a lacemaking supplier in Des Plaines, so Blair visited
the store. There she learned about local lace-making clubs such as Lace
Makers and Collectors Exchange (L.A.C.E.) based in Downers Grove and Prairie
Mill Lacemakers in Belvidere. She joined both groups.
Blair also is active among lacemaking groups on the Internet. Her husband,
Malcolm, is a technical director for Steel Founders Society of America
in Barrington, and travels the world frequently. Blair often goes with
him. Beforehand she goes on the Internet to look up lacemakers in the country
she will visit.
"I've met lacemakers in Denmark, France, Italy and New Zealand," she
said. "I stayed with one in Canada. I mean, that's brave of me, to stay
with someone I've never met."
Blair likes to work daytime in her family room, which is filled with
natural light. Her two cats avoid the temptation of attacking her string-filled
projects. "They never bother with it," she said. "I don't know why."
Blair said lace-making has become more than a hobby. "My husband's
been waiting for me to work it through my system," she said. "I'll probably
be doing lace until I can't see." |