Just nail a wood frame together; then staple or nail a canvas front to it; then staple or nail the silk over that; then use a fabric glue gun to apply the trim. Make one and then see how it looks (and consider one in black, too!).
Fr Jay you can find beautiful liturgical damasks through churchlinens.com they come from mperkins in England. All liturgical colors
I would do the frontal the old fashioned way as I wouldn't think you could count on the glue holding up over time and movement. storage would be a huge issue
This would be fine for something quick that wasn't meant to last
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J.P. Sonnen is an author, history docent, educator and travel writer. His graduate degrees are from the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum) in Rome, Italy.
4 comments:
You know I just might. Another inspirational post :)
God Bless.
Any suggestions where to find damask with ecclesial designs in it?
Thanks a lot it is a good guide, now to make a nice altar frontal... is simple utilizing your tips. Thanks
Fr Jay
you can find beautiful liturgical damasks through churchlinens.com
they come from mperkins in England. All liturgical colors
I would do the frontal the old fashioned way as I wouldn't think you could count on the glue holding up over time and movement.
storage would be a huge issue
This would be fine for something quick that wasn't meant to last
Sue
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