Doilies On The Furniture

Jazzy1

I Is A Turkey
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Do you remember any family member having doilies?
 

Doilies were a handcraft that took a lot of time to make large ones and besides being attractive they helped to protect furniture. I crocheted many years back but do not have any in my house now. I still admire the fine handcraft of crochet.
 

My mother had them on the backs of the sofa and chair when I was little, and on all the dressers.

My grandmothers had them all over the place. If there was a flat surface, there was a doily. One grandmother crocheted beautiful ones, the other bought them.

My great-aunt was a "tidy" hoarder. She saved every phone book, every broken comb or worn-out brush, every piece of mail, every..... She'd put them in boxes, stack them up and put a doily on the box. Every week, she'd wash, bleach and iron the doilies and put them back on the boxes.
 
I still use them.

Remember the antimacassar covers on upholstered furniture?

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They were originally designed to keep Macassar oil from staining upholstery.
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I had an elderly great aunt that used to crochet hot pads using bottle caps. She absolutely insisted that all of the caps be from soda bottles, no beer bottle caps allowed!

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My grandmother crocheted, knitted, tatted, and quilted. She had very little money, so she would often use her talents to make gifts for the family. Although I do not put doilies out these days, my wife liked the ones my grandmother gave us and had some of them out many years ago. In the guest bedroom, I have a quilt my grandmother made on top of the beige bedspread even now.
 
One of my mom’s hobbies was crocheting – she made many of those doilies, as well as a bedspread which I now have. She even tried to teach me how to crochet, but I just didn’t take to it
 


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