During the first morning we split into two groups: while one group went to view the Eye of the Needle Exhibition, the other set about choosing a colour scheme and selecting threads for their panel. After lunch, inspired by the magnificent embroideries we had seen and full of enthusiasm, we started stitching. As well as a piece of linen with the design drawn on, we were each given a piece of muslin to practice on. While a few brave souls pitched straight in on their linen, most of us choose to practice on the muslin first. In fact, I only stitched on the muslin during the course, choosing to try out some ideas for each motif.
I began with the pea pods. Pea pods are often stitched in needle lace; Nicola suggested that we do them in corded Brussels (buttonhole stitch with return). I have done this, or variations of this stitch, a few times already. Most recently I worked alternating up and down buttonhole with return of the Tudor Rose. When I wrote about the Tudor Rose, I commented that my stitching was more open and lacy than the original and thought that may have been because the back stitches of my outline may have been too large. I decided to practice the corded Brussels on the muslin to see if I could get the stitches smaller and denser. I started by outlining the pea pod with backstitch, this time concentrating on making them small and even. I think that I over compensated and made the stitches so small that I struggled to get my needle under them for the first row of buttonhole stitches. When I had completed the first row, subsequent rows went in more quickly and easily and I liked the small, dense stitching. Before I start on the linen, I will experiment some more to see if a slightly larger back stitch outline gives me the same result.
© Ornamental Embroidery/Carol-Anne Conway
The second motif I practised on day one was the strawberry. I thought that this also would look good stitched in needle lace. Nicola suggested that it might be nice to raise the motif slightly with some padding so I first stitched three layers of padding; first two layers of Colonial satin stitch (laid stitch) then a layer of satin stitch. I alternated the orientation of the stitches between vertical and horizontal, finishing with a vertical layer completely filling the area inside the backstitch outline. I wanted a more open, lacy stitch for the strawberry so Nicola suggested I use triple Brussels. The first row is formed by making three buttonhole stitches then leaving a gap before making the next three stitches, and so on across the row. On the second and subsequent rows, you make three buttonhole stitches into the bar that bridges the gap, and leave a gap above the three stitches in the previous row. The trick is to make the three stitches and the gaps of equal width. I really like the effect.
© Ornamental Embroidery/Carol-Anne Conway
© Ornamental Embroidery/Carol-Anne Conway
As I was only practising on the muslin, I only worked enough of each motif to ensure I knew what I was doing and to evaluate whether I liked the effect.
Happy Stitching.
4 comments:
This sounds like a wonderful workshop course. I'm looking forward to seeing more of your experiments!
Gosh, you are going to be an exert in detached needlelace stitches by the end of all this! Love the strawberry, looking forward to seing the rest.
Sorry "expert" I mean. My cat was helping me to type.
Ensuring that equal space is the trick indeed! I was working on a staggered triple buttonhole insertion hem yesterday and going to frog it all, coz I didn't do those spaces correctly.
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