A hint ----PINS
#22
"Ladies" used to keep their lost long hairs neatly coiled for future use ON THEIR OWN HEADS!!!! The first time I read about that I nearly gagged. Yes, as their hair began to turn gray or thin their ladies maid would work the saved hair into their "do" so that the hair appeared darker and fuller. When the do was taken down that loose hair had to be combed and re-wound. YUK!
It also used to be tightly coiled into flowers for jewelry and pictures. Sometimes a "dearly departed" ones hair was made into a broach for the grieving to wear as part of their year of mourning and sometimes even longer as a rememberance. Those things are quite valuable today to some collectors. (not me)
It also used to be tightly coiled into flowers for jewelry and pictures. Sometimes a "dearly departed" ones hair was made into a broach for the grieving to wear as part of their year of mourning and sometimes even longer as a rememberance. Those things are quite valuable today to some collectors. (not me)
#23
Wool is great as it has Lanalin (SP) in it, good old fashioned wool fat, which stops rust in pins also I have heard that a tiny bit of talc in the pin tin keeps pins from going rusty.
Gal
Gal
#24
One of the many things my grandmna had that I found so very pretty was a flower picture made of human hair. It was beautiful, and she and my G-grand made it, Mom even pointed out to mre the flower that was her hair. I wanted that picture so badly when she died, but a very greedy aunt took it for herself and then hid it behind a sofa once when I went to visit. I never cared for her after that, and then many many years later, when I asked about it, she had given it to her grand-daughter. That grand daughter never even knew my gramma! But the sunt said that she was very artistic and she would take goodf care of it. Like I wouldn"t have!! This same aunt is the one who hid all the 13 quilts that granma had made for her g-kids and never used. We were to get them when she died. "Dear aunt " knew nothing about any quilts like that, then sold them all at auction when she was moving into her daughters home. Even her daughter knew about them and didn'T get one! Those quilts sold for over $400 each and that was in the mid's. I felt nothing but hate for that aunt after that!!
#25
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Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 2,893
Originally Posted by amandasgramma
I was reading another thread and someone mentioned their pins were hard to "put thru the fabric". I was taught a hint when my daughter was in cloth diapers (yes, a 100 yrs ago). If the pins are "sticky" or hard to push thru, run the pin in your hair!!! No, don't stick yourself, slide the pin away from your head. The oils in your hair will give it enough lubrication to slide easily. I find that's easier than a bar of soap....the soap is always WAAAAY over there somewhere. :-D
#27
Originally Posted by McQuilter
in the "olden days" everyone had a hair receiver on their dresser. Usually a pretty china box with a hole in the top where they would clean out combs and brushes and deposit it in the hair receiver for future use.
#29
I just remembered.....my 6th grade school teacher (okay - back in '62) said they used to save hair and then use it to POOF up their hair. Kinda like the way we used to rat our hair. It gave the hair heighth.....think Gibson Girls
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04-10-2017 05:23 PM