Wordsmith.org
Posted By: linlita lachet - 06/17/07 03:35 AM
Does anyone still use the word lachet in replacement for shoelace?
Posted By: of troy Re: lachet - 06/17/07 01:07 PM
well i think i would only use shoe laces if there was some confusion.. normally i'd just call them laces..

and there are lots of possiblities for confusion --i knit lace!, so i have a collection of lace things, or laces.
but when i suggested some month ago that knitters take scraps of sock yarn and use a knob knitter (AKA a spool knitter, and various other names--i mean the kind of tool that makes ropes or reins, and to use them as laces in shoes or sneakers, (trainers) everyone knew i meant shoelaces and not some sort of exoitc lace covers for their footwear!

so i for 1 have replaced lachet with laces
Posted By: tsuwm Re: lachet - 06/17/07 02:33 PM
Originally Posted By: linlita
Does anyone still use the word lachet in replacement for shoelace?



the more recognized spelling seems to be latchet.
Posted By: linlita Re: lachet - 06/18/07 02:52 AM
Interesting...and creative too.
Posted By: Jackie Re: knit lace - 06/18/07 02:57 PM
That's cool. Is knitting lace different from tatting? Or is tatting also an outmoded word, now?
Posted By: of troy Re: knit lace - 06/18/07 04:31 PM
totally different! in terms of lace,
pillow or bobbin lace (lace hand woven on a pillow with each thread on its own bobbin) is the most traditional lace.
(its the lace sumptuary laws regulated!)

tatting, crochet, and knit lace were ways to get 'arround the law". (and are lacelike in that order (tatting is more like pillow lace than crocheted lace, which is more like pillow lace than knitted lace.. not that knitted lace isn't lacy.. its all a matter of degrees!

I know how to tat, but i am not very good at it--i can crochet too, but i tend to stick to my knitting!

tatting, like knitting is experiencing a revival, (search google blogs, and you'll find lots of young (20something) women tatting, and doing fun and new things (tatted lobsters!)

the recent exhibit at the Mus of Art and Design (Radical Lace and Subversive Knitting) had knitted, crocheted, and tatted lace elements. but no pillow/bobbin lace.

on average,1 square inch of pillow lace take about 1 hour to weave. France and Belgium were renouned for their laces, and sumpuary laws were to protect against trade imballances as much as anything else!--English king and queens didn't want resources going to these countries.

(i have never learned to do pillow lace (i know how to do it in theory--but...))
© Wordsmith.org