In one of my previous blogs from September 27, about {Our Home of almost 20 years} I've mentioned that I will show you the Rose Filet Lace Curtains that I hand crocheted from French DMC crochet thread. So now I will show them to you. If you read about the DMC History, than you know why I used this double mercerized finest crochet cotton. After all, I worked 80 hours on this front door set and it was for a value of $ 100.00 on material in 1990!
If there are still readers that don't know that I do LOVE roses... well, here you see a Rubber Ducky skirt that I got as a gift from friend Lei. Also you see the oak bench worked with roses in the back.
The curtains can face either way, I do vary at times. I've made them in Indonesia while living and working there. But now let's go back to where it started...
In May of 1975, I got this Dutch magazine and fell literally in love with the Rose design.
So I got out my steel crochet hook and thread and made me the first hand crocheted rose curtain.
Hung on two rods, in my living room... back in The Netherlands.
A couple of years later we bought our own home, instead of renting, and I designed another Rose Filet Lace Curtain. Still in The Netherlands.
Five years later, I designed another set for our first home in Dublin, Georgia - USA...
You can see it behind my friend and me.
September 1987 seen from inside at our former home...
While living in Pennsylvania and later in Italy, I did not have a Rose Filet Lace Curtain but while living and working in Indonesia I did crochet 80 hours and came home with the completed set. So since November of 1990, they're hanging here. Our garden is not yet established in this photo; we just moved in.
For the side windows I designed them in a finer, size 20 DMC Cébélia and for the main windows it is a size 10 Cébélia.
French DMC Cébélia Crochet cotton is indeed the finest in the world!
It being double mercerized makes it smooth and silky to work with and it looks great too.
On the inside I did sew a heavy rayon-cotton damask curtain with roses... as it helps keep the energy bill low during winter, as well as our hot summers. When not closed, it hangs with some tassels and cords to the side. Here is Anita, our foster-daughter standing in front of the front door.
You also still can see our white ceramic chandelier from Italy...
If you type in ceramic chandelier from the search box, top right you find more posts about it in detail.
Curtain is closed here.
Pieter wearing his Ermenegildo Zegna suit and I my Escada suit with blouse.
The rayon-cotton damask I got from Britex Fabrics in San Francisco. My favorite store for fabrics and notions. When we were still doing consulting work, we got to go to San Francisco quite often. They do also have a swatch service. Check out their site and I do follow their blog as well (you find it on the side-bar).
You can see how I did sew and pleat them, after I'd put the ribbon on.
Hard to capture the damask rose pattern... in a cream color.
But the rayon-cotton blend is beautiful. I don't like synthetics and these are far better for the energy saving purpose. So in two ways we keep the planet green.
This week I did clean the windows and wash meanwhile the crocheted curtains in my Miele washer.
Now the trick for having them hung just perfect.
Take them out of the washing machine after the spinning cycle has completed and work with them while they're still moist. First attach all four corners. Pieter, together with my Dad did painstakingly hammer tiny brass nails around the windows. They complained that it took them forever but I told them, that's only fair as I did crochet for 80 hours! The brass will never tarnish the curtains and besides, it is all painted over white. Below you get to see a detail with those nails.
The side panels are hanging already and this time I let the roses face towards the center.
Done and it took me less than an hour to pin them on.
When it is dark they show even better.
So now you've seen my hand crocheted French DMC Cébélia Rose Curtains in Filet-Lace...
Together with the heavy rayon-cotton over curtain it is our way of Going Green!
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