I'm following up on Elena and Sue's exchanges:

for those who didn't read my message about reading musical scores as a
writing system, the key thing I wanted to point out was knowing how to put
intervals of different lengths in a sequence. In music, it is the duration
and pitch of a note.

What about the equivalent to duration and pitch of a note in lace? the
place, tension, and angle of the thread?


Let's take the metaphor seriously:

being able to read the prickings of a lace pattern is like being able to
read a music score

In this analogy a design or a photograph of the finished lace is like
listening to a recording of the piece one is learning how to play or
sight-reading.

Ethnomusicologists spend all their time in the field observing and thinking
about how musicians in cultures without musical notation learn to play the
most intricate, complex music.
Surely this is the same for lacemakers who do not use diagrams!

The way one learns is by memorizing small bits as units, and then learning
to put them together in chunks and then learning how to memorize long
sequences of these units

Why couldn't this be the way for lacemaking?

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