'Here' is for chat about all things stitching, is a place to link to my various other sites, and somewhere to show and tell and never shut up.
Saturday, February 07, 2026
Monday, May 09, 2022
My Neighbour's Family Treasures, Part 2.
These embroidered cloths are from the home (pictured below) in Dunblane, Scotland that was a family holding of my neighbour Al McInnes. The same family responsible for the horse shoe jumper posted some time back (on Facebook, but also pictured below).
Young women of old were required to
have a basic repertoire of needlework skills and to produce embellished
tableware, bedding, undergarments and children’s wear for their families.
Starting before marriage with their ‘hope’ chest and with school samplers,
these amazing skills we now cherish and continue, though without the expectation. I'm sure the love was always there, in the making, but op shops are full of old doileys (for example) that nobody wants (except for all of us) and nobody uses (except us).
I’ve always been hugely
inspired by what my foremothers considered the ordinary, basic skills of their
domestic life.
We watched our grandmothers and the old women knitting and ‘doing’ the whole time and thought nothing of it, not realizing the incredible structural engineering and intricacy of such ordinary crafts. Obviously we do understand it. Obviously we knew what we were looking at but I've had many a comment about my embroidering or knitting being a granny's thing to do. Not as cool as painting or printmaking (which I love). I've had plenty of eye-rolls when people ask what I've been up to. The whole craft world has gone (largely) under the radar of the art world and this might be the boon! The incredible disguised as the ordinary.
It's difficult to see with my rubbish Ipad camera (I have a whiz bang camera still in the box waiting for me to grow some whatsits and fire it up). This piece of Netting Work if the only I have ever seen where the net is hand knotted before being embroidered.
Even what may appear to be a simple dinner table or bread basket cloth has a lot of work involved. These edges were compulsory fare when I started High School. Sooo boring, I thought then. But underneath it I was interested and henceforth noticed the work in these everyday objects. Respect!! It takes forever.
The embroidered band here reminds me of a (much borrowed) book on Yugoslavian embroidery, which I used in my crazy quilt.
Another dinner cloth with hours and hours of edging work. Each leaf will be pad stitched underneath before the satin stitching on top.
Saturday, June 05, 2021
The Evolution Of Hanky Boxes Into Yarn Bowls And Beyond
Monday, January 11, 2021
Two Would Have Done It But Bad Luck, I Made Three
These are very handy. One bowl for the bundle of colours (fair isle cardigan with 9 ish colours) and another for what I’m using, sitting on my lap or table. Stack them together out of the way later.
I’ve taken to making new boxes and bowl as holiday projects, ignoring my huge list of things I have started, want to do and plan and just cutting loose. Ignoring the fact that I have more boxes than hankies.
Sunday, January 10, 2021
Berlin Wool Work Picture For The Shed Wall
I so love the Victorian Berlin wool work patterns. This picture was printed out (A3) then glued onto heavy cardboard, which is a bit of a pain to crochet but it’s also not a big job. I forgot to photograph the back but will after it’s stretched and the lace has dried.
My crochet is awfully ad hoc and obviously uneven, but I’m happy. I’m using up my perle and crochet thread stash.
The picture is for the Bus Stop shed up in the garden. Or the kitchen, not sure.
What I want to do is paint a wash of dilute pva glue over the lace to completely stiffen it... but am not sure how to do it without glueing down the backing. Maybe cling wrap? Maybe that will pull off easily?
Or, I could lace it to four sticks, crossed at the corners. Hmmm... I could lace it to put the glue on... right...
Follow the labels below for tutorials, patterns and materials to make crocheted card (boxes) etc. if you want to.
Friday, January 01, 2021
Just Did It.
Following on from the last post...