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Showing posts with label crewel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crewel. Show all posts

Monday, December 24, 2012

Snowflake Lane & How to Make a Knotted Blanket Stitch

Christina  in Winter White Cape
at Snowflake Lane
Randy and I finished up our shopping at Bellevue Square where they have "Snowflake Lane" each night during the holidays. He's now entertaining us playing an assortment of Christmas music, Broadway show tunes, and pieces from the 20's to the 50's. I'm at a distinct disadvantage with "Name That Tune" for that era, since I wasn't even born yet, but my Mom is having a great time!
Snowflake Lane

Knotted Blanket Stitch
Since I always like to keep my hands busy, I'm working on an edging stitch for one of my embroidery samplers. I decided to do a Knotted Blanket Stitch, which I'll show  how to do here:



Step 1- Make a loop
Step 2 - Needle through loop and
above the lower thread from last stitch



Step 3- Pull loop tight around needle
Step 4 - Pull thread through, making
sure that loop stays tight to form knot

You might also be interested in:
Stitchwork Samplers
More Embroidery Samples



Merry Christmas from our family to yours and wishing us all Peace on Earth.

Christina




Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Day 1- Immersed in Splendor

Queen Elizabeth 1 in stunningly embroidered
dress
We started the Elizabethan embroidery class today with a slide show of incredible examples both from paintings and surviving pieces of embroidery.  Of course, fashion followed the monarch herself.  Her intricately embroidered dresses were masterworks and sometimes were so heavily jeweled that she would have to be carried, rather than walking.  In this picture to the right, the embroidery depicts all sorts of wildlife, some quite realistic and others from imagination.
Botanical & natural themes in Elizabethan gold work

Themes for embroidery during the 16th century generally tended to coincide with what people knew: botanical and animal life.  In this piece of gold-work (where the thread is wrapped with pure gold), undulating vines with leaves, flowers, caterpillars  moths, and other bugs are depicted.   However, Queen Elizabeth had a penchant for being one of a kind (she even had laws against others being able to wear things as grandiose as hers... like the size of their neck ruffs!)
"I always feel like somebody's watching me..."
In this painting, the embroidery design covering her dress is of eyes and ears, to imply that she could see and hear all and was omniscient over her subjects.  Wouldn't that strike terror into the hearts of her court, servants, and the general populace!


On the left sleeve, a jeweled serpent wraps and entwines itself, holding a heart-shaped ruby from it's mouth, representing the queen's passions (the heart) being controlled by her wisdom (the serpent.)

Looking at examples from the Victoria and Albert Museum's textile collection in London, as well as other British sources, we came to a greater understanding of the sheer magnitude of the embroidery movement during the Elizabethan era.

Other objects which I found interesting that were heavily embroidered were caskets (a type of box... not a coffin), books, and intricate gloves and mittens.  Maybe more on those another time.

After whetting our appetite with amazing image, we got down to stitchwork for the rest of the day.  So many stitches are able to be seen, but historians don't always know exactly how they were done.  There are often more than one way to create the same stitch.  So, we're learning many stitches, but not doing them necessarily in the same way which the were stitched in the past.

We are using authentic materials: wool, linen, and cotton for threads and fabric the most part, although some silk fabric was also used in that era.  I didn't realize that the term "crewel embroidery" means stitching with wool.  Hopefully I'll have a finished sampler or more done by the end of class tomorrow, so I can share some photos!