I’m always impressed
by the beautiful designs that can be worked in filet lace. Working on a square
grid would seem to be very limiting but in skilled hands quite naturalistic
images can be formed, as you can see with the cherubs and flowers in this
image.
To work filet
lace the lacemaker first has to make the net background. This is generally done
by starting at a corner of the work, which is secured to a fixed point. The net
is then made by looping thread round a spacer (rather like a lolly stick) to
ensure the squares of the net are the same size and securing them to the stitch
above with a knot. The lacemaker continues making a line of net stitches,
gradually increasing stitches on each side of the work, until the required size
is reached. It sounds complicated and is difficult to start with, until you get
into a rhythm and learn how to manipulate the various loops of the thread as
well as the netting needle and the spacer. In her book The technique of
filet lace, Pauline Knight includes some images of how to make the net,
which are helpful if you are learning netting. However, today you can cheat and
use readymade machine net for filet work if you find that easier.
Once the net is
made, or bought, the design has to be darned into it. Again this is not as simple
as just filling the area with solid stitching. The threads are worked over and
under each other in a regular pattern, so that, for linen stitch, two horizontal
and two vertical threads pass through each open square. Therefore the lacemaker
has to work out the thread paths before starting work. Margaret Swain in her
book The needlework of Mary Queen of Scots notes that Mary and her
companions were keen needlewomen and particularly enjoyed puzzling out how to
work filet lace designs ‘in an age that enjoyed mazes, anagrams and emblems’. So
not only are these lace curtains beautiful they are also works of art and artfulness.