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  1. #11
    ardchoille is offline This member has been inactive for more than 1 year
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    This type of thimble is an excellent idea.. reminds me of a sailor's palm (piece of leather covering the palm to protect it from the needles used to work rope).

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by ardchoille View Post
    This type of thimble is an excellent idea.. reminds me of a sailor's palm (piece of leather covering the palm to protect it from the needles used to work rope).
    I'm wondering why kilt makers don't use a palm.
    The Grant.

  3. #13
    ardchoille is offline This member has been inactive for more than 1 year
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    Quote Originally Posted by ccga3359 View Post
    I'm wondering why kilt makers don't use a palm.
    Well, sailors who work with rope are usually working with mooring line - very thick rope - which requires needles that are 4 inches long or longer. It takes a lot of force to push these huge needles through 2 inches of rope thickness. Kilt makers, on the other hand, probably don't deal with anything larger than a standard sewing needle, so a sailor's palm would be severe overkill.

  4. #14
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    A palm would affect your grip while holding and pleating the fabric.
    A thimble has less effect.


    Then there's goofballs like me, who handsew a kilt without using a thimble.
    I am easily moved for sympathy for dogs, far more so than for humans, because dogs do not understand. There is no way to explain that you will return, that the vet will make it all better, that they cannot go shooting today because that is not what today is about. They cannot work out that their misery is finite and will some time end, and so their misery is magnified.
    Gerald Hammond
    Mad Dogs and Scotsmen


  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by ardchoille View Post
    Well, sailors who work with rope are usually working with mooring line - very thick rope - which requires needles that are 4 inches long or longer. It takes a lot of force to push these huge needles through 2 inches of rope thickness. Kilt makers, on the other hand, probably don't deal with anything larger than a standard sewing needle, so a sailor's palm would be severe overkill.
    That is a roper's palm it has extra leather around the thumb for when reefing on line, the thimble also has bigger dimples for the larger needles. A sailmaker palm is for when using on sailcloth (heavy canvas).
    The Grant.

  6. #16
    ardchoille is offline This member has been inactive for more than 1 year
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wompet View Post
    A palm would affect your grip while holding and pleating the fabric.
    A thimble has less effect.
    Another very good point.


    Quote Originally Posted by Wompet View Post
    Then there's goofballs like me, who handsew a kilt without using a thimble.
    Painfully, I'm guilty of this too.

  7. #17
    Join Date
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    It is amazing what memory can do for you..... I am just getting ready to start a kilt and I remembered from way back this thread... Thanks again Barb!
    "A veteran, whether active duty, retired, national guard or reserve, is someone who, at one point in his life, wrote a blank check made payable to "The United States of America", for an amount of "up to and including my life." That is honor, and there are way too many people in this country who no longer understand it." anon

  8. #18
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    Cool! Let me know how it works for you.
    Kiltmaker, piper, and geologist (one of the few, the proud, with brains for rocks....
    Member, Scottish Tartans Authority
    Geology stuff (mostly) at http://people.hamilton.edu/btewksbu
    The Art of Kiltmaking at http://www.celticdragonpress.com

  9. #19
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    Barb, your original post made me think of an article that I saw in Threads a couple of years ago. Fortunately, they have the article on their website:

    http://www.taunton.com/threads/pages/t00077.asp


    I personally use a plastic open-sided thimble designed for people with long nails - not that my nails are long or anything, but I found it the most comfortable thimble for me.

    Here's a link for more online thimbles:
    http://www.agreatnotion.com/catalogue/index1.html

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