Thank you Jane!  You are quite right—Practical Skills has a nice explanation
with good diagrams. I will put a copy of that page with the Holly pattern so I
don’t make the same mistake again. The pattern designer called for removing
one of the middle pairs of passives. Although I elected to toss the passives
next to the edge pair, I failed to make the “whole stitch” edge as noted
on page 187, hence my dismay at the results. For clarity, Cook’s whole
stitch is the same as cloth/linen stitch! And now that I think about it, the
designer simply added a twist on each edge rather than make a cloth stitch
edge. Hmmmm, something else to investigate so that the leaf would be uniform
top to bottom. The Radix thread is very pretty but it un-plied easily.  If I
use it again, I will wind it counter-clockwise to see if that helps.  In the
meantime, I need a break from Holly so I will apply these ideas when I start
#3.  Thanks again Jane!  Sincerely, Susan Hottle USA

Sent from my iPad

> On Jan 21, 2018, at 6:25 AM, Jane Partridge <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I can't remember which book but there are instructions for removing pairs in
half stitch - I haven't done it for years but seem to remember that it is best
to drop the pair at an edge rather than in the middle (tie them off before you
throw them out completely, though). It might be in the "Cook Book" (Practical
Skills in Bobbin Lace) or it might be in Elsie Luxton's Technique of Honiton
Lace. Are the instructions for throwing out specifically for that leaf or do
they relate more so to one that has a cloth stitch edge and are implied for
the variations? Losing a pair in the middle of half stitch is going to make a
hole, as does adding or losing a twist. I don't think it is specifically
tension as half stitch tends to self-tension. The finer thread might make a
slight difference, especially with the difference in the way it was spun, and
the type of fibre (which will affect the way it behaves).
>

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