Tuesday, 30 June 2009

Reader embroideries: mountmellick and merezhka

Today I have two reader's embroideries to share with you.

Mimi is from Hong Kong and has recently been enjoying Mountmellick embroidery. Following is her first piece of Mountmellick embroidery - it is the framed flower spray from our book Mountmellick Embroidery: Inspired by Nature. I think her embroidery looks very beautiful and she has done a wonderful job!


Joan K from Sydney, Australia has recently purchased a copy of Ukrainian Drawn Thread Embroidery: Merezhka Poltavska and has been teaching herself merezhka. Joan has only recently branched out from cross stitch, after enjoying it alone for 40 years. She has taught herself both the large scale and small scale merezhka methods from the book. Joan commented, "Your merezhka instructions and illustrations are really clear and easy to follow."

From the results of Joan's bookmark, you can see that she's done a sterling job! The bookmark is one of the projects included in the book. The cloth on which the book and bookmark are photographed is one of Joan's past cross stitch projects.


Thank you to both Mimi and Joan for sharing your successes with me, so that I can share them with others!

Tuesday, 23 June 2009

a few new books

Over the past few weeks I've either bought or been given a few new books.

"Embroidered Textiles" by Sheila Paine. This is an amazing, thick book detailing the embroidery used around the world in different cultures. It has many, many coloured photos and is wonderful to inspect in great detail.

"The Goodhart Samplers" by Bromiley Phelan, Hansson and Holdsworth. This is another very heavy book with lots of wonderful close up photos of the embroideries. For anyone interested in samplers from the 16 and 17th centuries, this book is fabulous.

"The Proper Stitch" by Darlene O'Steen. I must say that I have been a bit disappointed by this book - I was expecting more from it. It doesn't include all the stitches I expected it to, and I'm not really sure why it is so expensive... Good book, but not what I was expecting.

"The Complete Stitch Encyclopedia" by Jan Eaton. This is an old book, but new to me. I had borrowed it from my local guild library and found it so useful that I decided to get myself a copy from Ebay. It was easier, quicker, and almost cheaper to buy it from Ebay than to go down to the guild to borrow it again!

Some of these have been acquired for the purposes of writing my left-handed stitch dictionary, but others were purely and simply for personal interest. Not sure how I'm going to fit these on the bookshelves... Have to do a bit more squeezing in!

Tuesday, 16 June 2009

the latest on the left-handed book

Well... since writing the post on what's going to be in the left-handed embroidery book, things have changed...

Kirsten Edwards of The Gift of Stitching has suggested a whole heap of specialty counted thread stitches for me to include. And I posted on The Gift of Stitching forums asking for people's top 5 specialty sampler stitch suggestions.

I just figure that if the book's going to be right, it has to include counted stitches as well.

Big sigh...

So, I'm having to add more pages and much more info. While that's a big thing for me, it means the book only gets better for you. And that's what this book is all about - being as useful as possible to left-handed stitchers.

So, you'll just have to be a bit more patient while I add a whole heap more to it. Please?

Saturday, 13 June 2009

Sydney Craft and Quilt Fair

Today I went to the Sydney Craft and Quilt Fair with my friend Kirsten Edwards who is the editor of The Gift Of Stitching online magazine, and my elder daughter, who we normally refer to in blogland as The Bookworm.

You're not supposed to take photos inside the venue due to copyright issues, so we got The Bookworm to take a photo of us outside the front door. She had to be very quick in between people rushing to get in the door, so it's not the best photo you've ever seen! Kirsten is on the left, and that's me on the right.

We all had a wonderful time.

The Bookworm came to the show for the first time. She's eight years old, and while she's not really into sewing very much, she likes being creative. I thought it would be a nice mother-daughter activity and she might find everything a bit inspiring. She loved it. Anything sparkly or shiny caught her eye. She had brought $20 of her pocket money, so she had a fun time noting down all the things she was interested in, then at the end of the day working out how far she could get her $20 to stretch. She bought some little treasures and was extremely pleased with her purchases. It was a good exercise in budgeting, working out what your priorities are, and realising that you can't just buy everything you see that you like the look of.

So, what did I buy? I purchased some doctor's flannel - I like to use this in needlecases. I also bought some Colourstreams and Kacoonda hand dyed wool felt, and some lovely lovely hand dyed "silk hankies" from Room For Threads. At Room for Threads, they use the silk hankies for incorporating into felted creations, but I'm going to use mine for embroidering on. I also purchased some gorgeous variegated wool thread from Kaalund Yarns, which I will use for embroidery.

I really was on a mission to get things for using in my inspiration panels for my left-handed book. I came away with lots of wonderful goodies. It was such fun, and I can't wait to get started with using them.

They also had a joint Wrap With Love and Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital stand where they were collecting donations of knitted rug squares and cotton undies. I've been interested in the Fistula Hospital for some time, and if we're ever in Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), I'd love to do some volunteering - teaching sewing or embroidery - while I am there. So I got a few brochures about the Fistula Hospital. What an inspiring place!

I had a chat with Kirsten about my left-handed book. She's really looking forward to it, as she's also left-handed - which I hadn't actually realised. Kirsten's focus is counted embroidery, and her magazine is primarily about cross stitch. She said "Of course, you'll have queen stitch in it."

Look of horror from me! "No, what's queen stitch?!"

"Oh Yvette! That's a really important counted thread stitch."

"Is it? I've never heard of it. What else am I missing?"

"Have you got rice stitch?"

"??"

"What about rhodes stitch?"

"????"

Oh dear... So Kirsten's set me in a complete spin - I had already filled the pages! So, on checking my book page plan (known in the book publishing world as a "flat plan"), I can see that by doing some judicious squishing and removing of less important introductory information, I can possibly grant myself an extra 9ish pages worth of space. Kirsten said she'll make a list of really important counted stitches that I should include. Fortunately I already have double running, cross stitch, smyrna cross, eyelets, french knots. But I await with baited breath her list of "must haves". (And you're welcome to add your own "counted stitch must haves" in the comments section.) I can't promise anything, but I will try to be accommodating.

Could be a rather large juggle of pages and their contents coming up in the next week. Still, better to do it now, than to wish I had done it after the book is published.

(Head in hands and rolling eyes in horror...)

Saturday, 6 June 2009

plaited braid stitch

A lot of people end up at this blog because of their interest in Elizabethan embroidery. They come here to see my Elizabethan embroidery from earlier this year.

For all those who are interested, The Embroiderer's Story currently has a series of posts about plaited braid stitch and how to do it. Very interesting information!

And for the left-handers amongst us, I remind you that there will be left-handed instructions for this stitch in my upcoming left-handed stitch dictionary!

Monday, 1 June 2009

What's going to be in the left-handed embroidery book?

A few people have asked what's going to be in my left-handed embroidery book, so now that things are a bit more finalised, I think its time to spill the beans.

I'm still not sure about the title, but "The Left-Handed Embroiderer's Companion" is my current top choice. The idea is that this is the book that left-handers will have sitting beside them, as their constant companion, as they stitch. (And I think it sounds quite friendly!) I'd love to hear what you think about the name.

For each stitch, there will be written step by step instructions, with a diagram for each step, showing you what to do. There will be a photo of each finished stitch, and a colourful inspiration panel which will show you what you can do with each stitch, to get you inspired. Where the stitch has other names, these will be listed and indexed, so that if you know a stitch by another name, you will still be able to find it. Finally, there will also be a diagram of how right-handers do the stitch, so that right-handed teachers can see the difference between what they do, and what their left-handed student will do.

So, here's the provisional list of stitches. Its a provisional list because you never know if I might have to take one out yet, or even add another one in.
  • Antwerp edging stitch
  • Armenian edging stitch
  • back stitch
    • zigzagging back stitch
    • double back stitch
    • threaded back stitch
    • whipped back stitch
    • pekinese stitch
    • double pekinese stitch
  • basque stitch
  • braid edging stitch
  • breton stitch
  • bonnet stitch
  • bullion knot
    • overwrapped bullion
    • bullion loop
  • buttonhole stitch
    • blanket stitch
    • closed buttonhole stitch
    • crossed buttonhole stitch
    • knotted buttonhole stitch
    • buttonhole wheel
    • whipped buttonhole
    • tailor's buttonhole stitch
    • up and down buttonhole stitch
    • open buttonhole filling
    • buttonhole filling with return
    • fancy buttonhole filling
  • cable chain stitch
    • stepped cable chain stitch
    • zigzagging cable chain stitch
  • cable plait stitch
  • cast on stitch
    • double cast on stitch
  • ceylon stitch
    • ladder stitch
  • chain stitch
    • twisted chain stitch
    • alternating twisted chain stitch
    • zigzagging chain stitch
    • detached chain stitch
    • lazy daisy stitch
    • whipped chain stitch
    • threaded chain stitch
    • interlaced chain stitch
    • square chain stitch
    • rosette chain stitch
    • rope stitch
    • knotted chain stitch
    • magic chain stitch
    • reverse chain stitch
    • heavy chain stitch
    • Hungarian braided chain stitch
    • raised chain stitch band
    • feathered chain stitch
    • crested chain stitch
  • chevron stitch
    • pagoda stitch
    • half chevron stitch
    • raised chevron stitch
  • chinese knot
  • colonial knot
  • coral knot stitch
    • zigzagging coral knot stitch
  • couching
    • couched trellis
    • couched burden stitch
    • bokhara couching
    • Roumanian couching
    • New England laid stitch
  • cretan stitch
    • knotted cretan stitch
    • cretan catch stitch
  • cross stitch
    • smyrna cross stitch
    • long-legged cross stitch
    • chained cross stitch
  • diamond stitch
  • drizzle stitch
  • eyelets
    • cut eyelets
    • counted thread eyelets
  • fishbone stitch
  • feather stitch
    • double feather stitch
    • double feather stitch variation
    • single feather stitch
    • long-armed feather stitch
    • closed feather stitch
    • closed feather stitch
    • upright feather stitch
    • Spanish knotted feather stitch
  • fly stitch
    • tete de boeuf stitch
    • Italian knotted border stitch
  • French knot
    • pistil stitch
  • hem stitch
    • antique hem stitch
  • glove stitch
    • French glove stitch
  • herringbone stitch
    • threaded herringbone stitch
    • Deerfield herringbone stitch
    • herringbone ladder filling stitch
    • double herringbone stitch 1
    • double herringbone stitch 2
    • interlaced herringbone stitch
  • long and short stitch
    • irregular long and short stitch
  • loop stitch
  • Mountmellick stitch
  • Mountmellick thorn stitch
  • outline stitch
  • Palestrina knot stitch
    • long-armed Palestrina knot stitch
    • sorbello stitch
    • knotted pearl stitch
  • Parma stitch
  • pearl stitch
  • plaited braid stitch
  • rosette stitch
  • running stitch
    • whipped running stitch
    • threaded running stitch
    • burden stitch
    • Holbein stitch
  • satin stitch
    • padded satin stitch
  • seeding
    • double seed stitch
  • scroll stitch
  • sheaf stitch
  • shisha stitch
  • smocker's knot
  • split stitch
    • split back stitch
  • spider web, whipped
    • spider web, woven
  • stem stitch
    • Portuguese knotted stem stitch
    • raised stem stitch band
  • thorn stitch
  • trellis stitch
  • turkey work
  • vandyke stitch
  • wheat ear stitch
For those of you who have made it through to the end of the list, congratulations!

If all goes according to plan, this left-handed stitch dictionary will be available by the end of 2009.

Saturday, 30 May 2009

stitch instructions and diagrams done!

I've just finished all the stitch instructions and diagrams, one day ahead of my deadline. WOOHOO!!

Just did a spell check and word count. Its over 35000 words. I don't think I've ever written that much before... Its certainly more than my previous books. And yet, so much of it is pictures.

I must do a picture count at some point. I think I'll be amazed how many there are. It wouldn't surprise me if there were over 1000. (...a few seconds later...) I just did the maths. 1000 pictures divided by approximately 130 pages = about 7.69 pictures per page. Yep, I'll have easily exceeded 1000 pictures.

Now I'm off to read "The Secret Scriptures" by Sebastian Barry. Time for a break! :-)