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Alternative Cathedral spider (lower)

Cathedral spider

A spider is a decorative effect in Torchon lace where 4 or more pairs meet. The pairs form the legs before and after the centre, or body. A cathedral spider is half of a conventional spider. The gap in the other half looks like the window of a cathedral. Click here for an ordinary cathedral spider. This is a more complicated alternative. It has 8 pairs. You can have different numbers of legs.

See pattern 534 for an example.

Please note that the leg of a spider is a twisted pair of threads. This should not be confused with a plait, which can be called a leg in English Midland lace.

Pattern for spider
Spider pattern

The pattern for a cathedral sider may be the same as an ordinary spider (with a note to explain what type of spider it is), or there may be an attempt to indicate the difference on the pattern, as above.

You can see that the spider fits within a diamond of pins. Unlike solid areas, you do work up to and including these surrounding pinholes before starting on the spider. The threads from the points of the diamond of pins are not actually involved in the spider at all.

The stitches used in this spider are twist single pair and cloth stitch. This diagram shows each pair as a line. Wherever two lines cross, the pairs are worked in cloth stitch.

Spider

Repeat Step Back

Working:
Twist all pairs twice.
Put the pin in the centre.
Take both outer pairs. Work them in cloth stitch to the centre, then across each other, then continuing on to the other edge. twist twice, then work them with the edge pairs (in cloth stitch and twist). They have left the cathedral spider.
Take the next two outer pairs, and do the same.
Do the same for the rest of the pairs, two at a time.
When all done, do the bottom pin for the two edging pairs.

I advise that you are confident in working an ordinary spider before you try this.

It is also possible to have a cathedral spider worked above the pin - a cathedral spider (upper).