Hairpin Lace Crochet

Black and white illustration of a hand working with a crochet hook and hairpin lace loom, showing stitches in progress.

I recently discovered hairpin lace. It apparently had its heyday in the Victorian era, but it’s essentially simple crochet done on a simple frame loom (originally hairpins, hence the name).

It originally caught my eye because my brain is working on the problem of creating string heddles for a teeny tiny weaving loom I’m conceptualizing. I saw a video on Pinterest that made me think this could be part of the solution. (Will I make the heddles? Or the loom? Time will tell!)

The initial challenge of hairpin lace is that it does require having the loom. They aren’t especially expensive but it’s definitely a unitasker and the ones you can get quickly from Amazon have mediocre reviews. The ones from Clover Japan are likely better but not available in a hurry.

It didn’t take me long to realize I could pretty easily make a loom with some scrap wood and some metal rods from the hardware store. That’s where I started. (I also made a video about making a loom from cardboard and household items!)

At this point I’m still very much in the “figuring out what I can do with this” stage, but there are some tantalizing hints around… a few YouTube videos that go beyond the basics, a couple of contemporary Japanese craft books (have y’all seen pomadour24’s shop?!), and a number of public domain booklets from the early 1900s. I’ve also got some ideas of my own to try—more on those soon!


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Every so often I write a letter to my favorite curious people—new experiments, what’s working, what spectacularly isn’t, and first dibs on workshop dates. And yes, I mean a real letter: paper, envelope, your actual mailbox. No firehose, no spam, just the good stuff—handmade and slow, on purpose.

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  1. […] first hairpin lace crochet projects have been exactly the kind of basic ones that are in all the introductory descriptions and […]

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