Stitching with a Shimmy

Shimmying through life with needles and thread…
June 10th, 2011

Old, almost first, embroidery…

Embroidered comforter

Twin sized embroidered & tied comforter

I say “almost first” because I remember three embroidery pieces prior to this, other than my two first forays into counted cross stitch… This IS my first big huge project that actually got finished (with the exception of my first fisherman knit sweater…).

This project was finished in about 1988, and I’ve used it almost constantly since then.

The motifs were iron-on transfers from a huge book of them that I still have, from the only section that appealed to me! I fit them on a twin-sized cotton flat sheet that I bought on sale and then started embroidering.

Stitches are very basic – mostly stem, with some satin, french knots and a little bit of couching in the central motif (I’d do that differently now!).

It’s backed with another sheet – cotton flannel this time;  filled with a three inch polyfill batt and then tied, because I wanted a thick fluffy comforter look rather than doing a bunch of hand quilting. I had no idea how to make a quilt, so it’s bagged and turned, as if it were just a pillow — no binding.  My sewing machine wouldn’t take the strain of even the side edges, so for the most part, they are hand stitched seams.

So it’s now 2011. That makes it 23 years old. It has had hot wax spilled on it, gone to several SCA events as part of my bedroll, and generally seen very hard use. Thrown into the washing machine AND the dryer (in apartments and laundromats, so on HOT) with no respect for the work I put into it… And yet I’m still using it.

At the time, DMC floss was about 25 cents a skein, and I could often get it for 10 for a dollar. I think the entire quilt cost me about $20.00 all told – and I was annoyed because the batting was “expensive.”  Pretty good bargain for 23 years and more usage!

The stitching is beginning to wear thin (gone in some places), but the colors are still bright. I’ll put closeups of some of the motifs  below.  It will never be an heirloom – I’m going to wear it out long before my non-existent children get their hands on it! But it’s six months of work that I’ve never regretted. And it still makes me smile when it’s thrown on the bed or over a sick husband on the couch.  Such is the power of embroidery.

Red birds

A really bad area for lost stitches

Closeup of red birds

The wings close up. Even worse magnified!

The red bird motifs are a pretty bad area for lost stitches. The leaves were couched into a very open chain stitch and have all but gone. The stem stitch wings are missing parts of themselves, too.

French knots with many wraps often take the worst of the damage from the washing machine because they stick out. Many of the birds now have eye stalks instead of beady little eyes!

 

blue birds

The blue birds didn't take as much damage.

closeup of flower motif

Closeup of Flower Motif

The blue birds didn’t take quite as much damage as the red ones, but the stem stitch still wore. Part of this is due to the fact that I was young and in a hurry, and my stem stitches were not as small nor as even as they could have been at the time. :)

You can see the disappearing french knot effect on the Flower motif to the right.

And the worst damage was in this red flower motif.

Flower Motif

The worst damage.

You can see the needle holes for the missing stitches when you enlarge the photo. It’s lost most of the red & pink flower and some of the leaves and stems, too. Strangely, on this one the french knots are doing fine! But you can also tell that over the years the “permanent” transfer ink has finally washed out with the stitching!

August 16th, 2010

YARN!!!!

Sock Yarn for embroidery!

My yarn for the test stitching for the shower curtain came on Saturday (ordered it from Knitpicks, and it always arrives so fast)! I am a very happy camper. I only messed up color wise on about three skeins, so I can work on looking that up. I decided to work up a cafe curtain in  a similar design to use on the window, and to test out the stitching – it will give me the opportunity to test stitches, and see how much thread I’m really going to need without guessing. One of the catches to using sock yarn is that because it isn’t designed for embroidery, colors change seasonally. Sometimes drastically!

The colors that don’t work in this pile are pretty obvious, the bright yellow on the right, and the very light blue at the bottom. There are two other blues that are too close together in shade… if I can find one in between, the light blue might work after all…

So now I’m off to transfer the smaller cafe curtain design to the fabric and start playing! Yay!!! (oh, wait. There’s other work that needs to be done first. Darn real life!)

September 8th, 2009

So many Kinds of Needlework…

And so little time to play with them!

Just offhand, I can think of bargello, berlin, broderie anglaise, hardanger, mountmellick, stumpwork, cutwork, punto in aria, zardozi, bunka, japanese embroidery, wessex embroidery, counted cross stitch, band samplers of every ilk, canvaswork, goldwork, shisha, macramé, blackwork, or nué, crewelwork, schwalmwork, Dresdenwork, Assissiwork, and so on…

My problem, of course, is that when it comes to thread I am a glutton. I want to learn everything and try every technique, no matter how complex. Of course, this isn’t feasible, especially when you realize that I include all thread work in that desire – including knitting, crochet, bobbin lace, needlelace, sprang and any number of other techniques that escape me at the moment, including plain sewing. (I have made a conscious decision NOT to try naålbinding — knitting on TWO needles was confusing enough for me. I don’t really want to try knitting with only one, however historical it is. :)

There isn’t, of course, enough time in the day to explore everything I want tot do. I try not to let that stall me, and just keep going. I do find myself back at three in particular that I love: cross stitch, silk shading, and crewelwork. I’m sentimental, and these are the three that my mother and grandmother taught me. Somewhere I still have my first cross stitch sampler — the one that took me four years to finish because I kept getting bored. When I find it I’ll post it. I have some sort of idea of charting it (it was stamped on cheap muslin) and doing it again in my current ability level and then framing them side by side. I think it would be cool. Will I make the time? Who knows.

January 2nd, 2009

The Great Cat Pillow…

My godson is turning twelve this February. He wants handknit socks. However, he wants a very specific colorway that is probably going to necessitate my actually buying sock blanks and dying them myself. This is not going to happen and still get them knit in that amount of time. As usual, click on thumbnails to see more detail.

kittypilloworiginalthread.jpgTwo years ago I went on a garage sale binge. I was looking for specific things for the house, but instead I found… needlework supplies. Lots and lots of needlework supplies, some of which I bought sight unseen. One of the kits in one of these lots was a candlewicked cat pillow pattern put out by Caron. I’ve been hemming and hawing about the color scheme for a year now. The colors that came with the kit are er… very pastel.

kittypillownewthread.jpgWhile I am sure that the kiddo will love the kitty, I didn’t think the colors that came with it were going to fly. So for a year I’ve postponed stitching it. Finally his mother pointed out that I don’t HAVE to use the colors or the threads that came with it… how many obvious things can I miss? Of course, the point was probably that I didnt’ want to waste the cheap thread that came with the original cheap kit… Heh. I should know better by now, right? Thread is cheap in general. Don’t be afraid to change it. kittypillow1.jpg

So I’ve changed the color scheme for something a bit more… er manly? Well, bright at least! And the kitty color is now that of his cat. I’m pretty sure kittypillowdetail1.jpghe’s going to like it, but I’ll also provide a more boyish present at the same time, and the suggestion that he leave the pillow in the living room so that he can blame it on his Mom when friends are over.

almostkitty.jpgEven more of the kitty has been stitched now! Just the yellow yarn and the green yarn to go and then I can figure out how to put a zipper in a pillow so it can be washed. This IS for a 12 year old boy, after all! I may enlist his mother — she used to work in soft furnishings and knows about all that sewing and finishing stuff that I have studiously avoided learning. Which is kind of funny .given that I’m the one who taught her how to sew… But that’s story for another day.

June 28th, 2008

This and that…

I decided Thursday on a whim to actually sign up for Sharon Boggon’s new Studio Journal course at Joggles. Since I don’t have a lot of formal art training, I’ve always felt pressured by my sketchbooks… and that I shouldn’t be. So I’m hoping this will give me a new lease on them. I know just the little bit she covered sketchbooks in the Sumptuous Surfaces class helped immensely last year.

So. First week started Friday, and I’m already psyched about this. :) YAY!! This was a good investment for my art and my business, I think.

So Friday I went out to Michaels thinking maybe I’d get a new journal. Decided to use the one I’ve already got. Got the 2 skeins of DMC I needed to finish a sampler (Spots of Fun – by  Debbie Draper). I’m doing it all in one color of variegated thread.

Anyway, while I was at Michaels, I saw these little bobbins of ribbon in the ribbon section… Ended up buying 5 of them. They’re intended for scrapbooking and paper crafts. Ummm… if you say so. I’m going to stitch with them, of course. Pictures. Click to enbiggen:

june2008threads-001.jpgjune2008threads-002.jpgjune2008threads-003.jpg

I think my favorite thread is the one in the last picture. It has what seem to be little pompoms every 3/8 inch or so. And of course it’s in blue and lavender, which though I keep trying to expand my color schemes I seem to always come back to: blue, green and lavender. Oceans. Grin.

I’ll keep y’all posted on what I’m doing with it all! If I can actually get to my studio any time soon, that is!