"Karen H. Thompson Contact: ipswichsamples@gmail.com Karen Thompson grew up in Denmark and learned to make bobbin lace from her mother. Since then she has taught others of all ages to make lace. Karen has studied and reconstructed all 22 black silk lace samples that were sent to Secretary of Treasury Alexander Hamilton in 1790 from Ipswich, MA, as part of the first census of US manufactures. One of her reconstructed Ipswich lace samples from 1789-1790 has been on public display in the ""Within These Walls..."" exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History in Washington, DC, since 2001. Committed to education, Karen has attended lace conferences and workshops locally, nationally, and internationally, sometimes as a student, and just as often as a teacher or lecturer. Since 1998, Karen has been volunteering with the lace collection at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History. Her goal is to further the interest in historic lace, lace identification, and lace making and to document as many of the laces in the Smithsonian collection as possible to make them available for online study. Select print and web publications: ""Lacemaking in Ipswich, Massachusetts: An Unlikely Enterprise"" Piece Work Magazine, May/June 2008. 36-41 ""Ipswich Lace at the Smithsonian"" OIDFA Bulletin 3, 2002, 24-27 (Quarterly Journal of the International Bobbin and Needle Lace Organization) The Lace Collection at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History: http: //americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object-groups/lace-collection The World War One Laces at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History: http: //americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object-groups/world-war-one-laces ""The delicate ""war laces"" of World War I"" at the Smithsonian: http: //americanhistory.si.edu/blog/delicate-war-laces-world-war-i ""The finer details of the Hapsburg Imperial Bridal Veil"" at the Smithsonian: http: //americanhistory.si.edu/blog/2011/06/the-finer-details-of-the-hapsburg-imperial-bridal-veil.html ""The Bayeux Tapestry at the Smithsonian? Yes, but who made it, when, where and why?"" http: //americanhistory.si.edu/blog/2012/09/the-bayeux-tapestry-at-the-smithsonian-yes-but-who-made-it-when-where-and-why.html ""The Torchon Lace Company: The fine line between entrepreneurship and fraud"", Smithsonian: http: //americanhistory.si.edu/blog/torchon-lace-company-fine-line-between-entrepreneurship-and-fraud"