Monday, May 6, 2019

Mother's Day Gift Idea

I spent the day adding a gift suggestion to some of the listings in my Etsy shop. Etsy provides support and ideas for shop owners and I followed the suggestion to add ideas for gifting an item for Mother's Day. 

'Flowers and cushion stitch' and 'Rhodes and roses' pincushions

The embroidery patterns in my shop are all digital patterns. Most are for pincushions. Customers usually download the pattern, embroider it and make up the pincushion as the gift.


You could also print out the pattern so that the pattern itself becomes the gift and add the threads that are required.

Alternatively, print out the pattern and add a few other useful embroidery items as well. A packet of the recommended needles or a pair of embroidery scissors would make a welcome addition for your favourite embroiderer.


The patterns, thread and other requirements take up little space. They are ideal to take along as a small project on a long trip because everything can easily be tucked into your bag. Except the scissors if you are flying!

Visit my Etsy shop Lynlubell to see the patterns by clicking here. There are needlepoint or canvas work patterns, as well as pulled thread and Australian cross stitch.

Happy Mother's Day for Sunday 12th May!




Sunday, April 28, 2019

Sewing Table

I need to do a tidy up of my sewing table. It's a beautiful African mahogany table made for me by my father especially for laying out dress fabric and cutting out sewing patterns. The big surface means there's also lots of space to 'put things'.


I have been doing some pulled work and experimenting. There's not much to show but I'll tell you more about that soon.


'Till then, happy stitching.

Thursday, April 18, 2019

The Notre Dame

It was very sad this week waking to the news from Paris that the Notre Dame had lost it's roof and been damaged by fire. I had visited it twice and found it difficult to believe that a solid cathedral that has stood for over 800 years had painted such a dreadful picture with it's roof in flames. There is an informative pictorial description of the Notre Dame as it was and of what was damaged here. It was good to learn that the magnificent rose windows have survived, the building still stands and that many of the treasures were saved too.

Notre Dame before the fire. Image courtesy Ian Kersall Pixabay
Chilly Hollow has listed links to needlepoint canvases that commemorate the Notre Dame. There is also a link to a free line drawing of the front of the cathedral that can be used for embroidering. Click here to see the list of sites and their links.

Happy Stitching!

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Thread Detective

This Good News article made me think of my varsity days in the chemistry lab doing practicals and seeing little smudges of colour appearing on blotting paper. All I remember is that it was a paper chromatography experiment and my partner seemed to know a lot more about it than I did.

But in this case it's the thread that changes colour after detecting certain dangerous gases in the air.

Courtesy of Good News Network
I can just imagine going off to work at the local chemical plant wearing a blue shirt and finding halfway through the morning that it's turning brown, or yellow. And if you're not sure whether you are imagining it, taking out a smartphone camera. Apparently it can tell you of even small amounts of harmful gases in the air. Isn't science amazing?

I wonder if embroidering a shirt or a badge with this type of thread would be sufficient to let you know that the air you were breathing was becoming hazardous.




Saturday, March 30, 2019

A little more Reticella

In my previous Reticella post here, Susan B kindly left a comment suggesting a look at Giuliana Buonpadre's colourful work and her book Herbarium. If you are looking for Reticella with a contemporary look, take a look at Giuliana's book here. 


To see a beautiful white on white Reticella square embroidered from one of Giuliana's patterns, visit Yolande's blog Fils et aiguilles here. Both sites have English translations.

I hope you will be inspired.

Till next time, happy stitching.

Saturday, March 23, 2019

First Stitches

I  recently listened to Phillipa Turnbull's interview with Gary Parr on his podcast Fiber Talk. I was interested to hear her comment that beginners find it easier to embroider with wool rather than "slippery cotton" and I had an idea. I had some crewel wool that I purchased from the CEG sales table a few years ago.


Yesterday my grandchildren aged 6 and 8 were introduced to a needle and thread. They enjoy arranging the glass-headed pins in my pincushion but had not yet done any stitching. Both were surprised to find that unlike a pin, the needle had a little hole in it. And, the thread actually has to go through that little hole.

I edged squares of loosely-woven Aida-like fabric to make coasters and started them off with a row of running stitch. The idea was to teach them a few basics like how to hold the needle so the thread doesn't slip out of it and how to sew in a straight line and keep stitches all the same length.


After a few protests of "I can't do this. It's too hard", silence suddenly reigned. And I threaded needles. Then, one tied a knot so that the thread wouldn't come out of the needle and learned that it makes it harder to pull it through the fabric. We all learned lots of valuable little lessons.

I took a photo when the children had a break. The six year old  carefully tried to keep her running stitches all the same. The eight year old quite simply followed his own plan and drew lines with the needle and thread. To my surprise he used back stitch, something which he picked up after watching only once how I began the row of running stitch for him.


Although they did more stitching I didn't manage to take another photo before the coasters were eagerly wrapped and ready to give to their mom who returns from a 10 day business trip later night.

The wool worked well for little fingers stitching their very first project. I think I'll probably use it again for the next one.

If you haven't listened to a Fiber Talk podcast and want some stitching company while you stitch you'll find lots to choose from on the website here. I have particularly enjoyed hearing the voices of embroiderers whose embroidery I admire as well as learning a little more about them and their work.

Till next time, happy stitching.


Saturday, March 2, 2019

Spectacle Case Last Round Decisions

I have almost finished the spectacle case I started some weeks ago, fitting in a few minutes here and there to work on it. Read about it in previous posts by clicking here, here and here.

With only one final round of stitching to do, I tried out a few alternate ideas. I tried rice stitch which you can see on the left below. First, with the dark green cross underneath and the corners crossed in light green. Then I reversed the colours and tried light green for the cross and covered the corners with dark green thread. No, those both looked too busy and seemed to detract from the rest of the embroidery.


Maybe plain cushion stitch in either light green or dark green? No, neither looked right against the row of brown cushion stitch right next to it.


How about a row of satin stitch in dark green, above on the right? No, too dull and looks heavy.

A row of Smyrna cross in light green as suggested in the pattern in the kit? Yes. I like the way it connects with the light green in the rest of the piece. I also like the contrast of its rough texture with the smooth brown cushion stitch. Smyrna cross works up quickly so it won't take long to complete the final round of stitching. See stitch diagrams for Smyrna cross here.

Do you also consider changing an embroidery pattern as you stitch? I find my mind going through possible options as I go along and I can't resist trying them out. Some ideas work and others don't, but it does make the stitching more interesting.
----------

On a different note, we were all thankful that Cyclone Oma did not make landfall here, but rather sorry that it didn't come just a little bit closer to the coast and bring us some much needed rain. Brisbane has had an exceptionally hot and very dry summer.

Till next time, happy stitching.


Thursday, February 21, 2019

A Few More Stitches

After taking a bit of a break from the canvas work spectacle case, it has progressed by a few more rounds. Somehow, it's surprising how just 10 minutes here and there eventually do add up. Once I had the spacing worked out for the Smyrna Cross Stitch,


had added in the green trellis effect, and a row of cushion stitch, I was looking forward to stitching the oblong rice stitch. That's the long dark green cross with a rusty red and a little pop of pale green to light up the centre.


I think it looks intricate and rather Christmassy, but it was straightforward to stitch.


Some changes I made to the original pattern meant I had to work sparingly with the limited amount of variegated thread that came with the kit.


I wasn't sure there would be enough for the last few cushion stitches.


In the end there was just sufficient for what I wanted to do, with none at all to spare. That little bit in the needle was all I had left.


I've filled in the last few stitches and now there's just one more round to do before the embroidery is complete.

On a completely different note, we are carefully following the progress of Cyclone Oma which is moving closer to the east coast of Australia. It is currently 900 kilometres offshore. At one stage it was predicted to be on a direct path for Brisbane. Today however it seems unlikely that it will cross the coastline. The wind has already picked up where we are, a few kilometres in from the coast, and we do need the rain, but not a direct hit from a cyclone. In the meantime we have checked the gutters, gathered all the loose items outside, filled the car with petrol and done another grocery shop. The gas bottle is full, we've got candles and also matches. All this just in case Oma gets much closer.

Satellite image, ABC news
Till next time, keep safe and happy stitching!





Friday, February 1, 2019

Reticella - Should it be White?

Reticella embroidery has always intrigued me. It's a form of whitework embroidery that combines cutwork and needlemade lace and it's generally identifiable by the square shape of the motifs.

South African embroiderers may remember the extraordinary embroidery of embroider and designer Hetsie van Wyk. See photos of Hetsie's embroidery here and here. Following the detailed instructions in her book Embroider Now, I once tried doing a little piece of Reticella - in pink.


I had just been on a visit to family in Zimbabwe and I had been able to find some Zimbabwe cotton. At the time it was a favourite among local embroiderers because it was an inexpensive evenweave type fabric that could be used for counted thread embroidery, particularly cross stitch and pulled thread work.

It was ideal for experimenting and trying out new stitches and techniques and I was tempted to buy not only the traditional white or ecru, but also small lengths of coloured fabric.


I find there is something especially alluring about white embroidery on white fabric. The question was to see how a piece of traditional whitework would look when embroidered on coloured fabric with matching threads.


Although I need more practice with the technique, I was fairly happy with this little piece of Reticella on the pink Zimbabwe cotton. But, I still think it's hard to beat whitework embroidery embroidered with white thread on white fabric. I'd love to know what you think.

Till next time, happy stitching!

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Happy 2019!

I hope that you had a happy Christmas and that 2019 will be a very good year for you - healthy,  rewarding and happy.

This Christmas was the first time all four of our grandchildren were with us. Talk about excitement!


Our two daughters and their families had dinner with us almost every night and the four children (ages 5,6,7 and 8) got on so well together that there were tears when the cousins had to part.

Photo taken by Cindy on the Nudgee Wetlands boardwalk
After a busy but very happy couple of weeks our routine is slowly returning to normal. Cindy and family are back in Bangkok and getting ready to return to school and to work. Bronwyn and family are camping down on the New South Wales coast and we are looking after their two cats.

Besides taking up hems and sewing on buttons, I seem to have done little with my needle and thread recently. Any embroidery inspiration has vanished. I'm sure it will soon return. In the meantime I have been reading and enjoying being able to source e-books from the Brisbane library. The weather is balmy and our patio overlooking the little park is, as my son-in-law put it, 'the best room in the house', a great place to soak up the peaceful surroundings, watch the birds .... and stitch.

I hope you are relaxed, refreshed and inspired after the holidays.