"Recently,
there has been a real
resurgence in lace making.
I think it's a 'back
to our roots' idea.
Or as someone said recently,
it may be 'high touch',
a counter to high-tech."
Says Kathleen Warnick,
who holds degrees from
the University of Idaho
and the University of
Wisconsin.
"I like to find
out all the different
techniques that have
been used in the making
of lace." Says Warnick, now 85, who
has lived in Moscow,
Idaho, since 1947. "My
specific interest is
in the kind of lace
people have been making
in the United States
for the past 150 years."