Thursday, 16 May 2013

For Worship and Glory

A few days ago one of my Japanese embroidery friends, Maggie, invited me to go to the Royal School of Needlework with her. Her husband had bought her two tickets as a birthday present, and Maggie thought that of all her embroidery friends I probably lived the closest to Hampton Court Palace. I, of course, was delighted to accept the invitation. I knew that the RSN were staging an exhibition of ecclesiastical embroidery (For Worship and Glory) this year, but until I read about it on Needle n’ Thread on Monday, I had not realised that the exhibition had begun. Once I knew that, I was even more delighted to be accompanying Maggie.

Maggie and I met at the main entrance to the Palace; I had driven there and Maggie came by train. It took us a little while to find the RSN within the Palace and we arrived just as the tour was about to start. We were shown into one of the studio workshops where we were given an introductory talk by the studio manager. We were told a little about the history of the RSN and some of the many ecclesiastical items that they had created, conserved or restored.

Main Entrance, Hampton Court Palace

The 20 or so visitors were then divided into two groups to view the exhibition. On display were examples of ecclesiastical embroidery worked by the RSN and items from their collection. There were also a few other items that are permanently on display (mostly because they are too large to be stored elsewhere). To begin with our group remained in Studio 3 to view the items on display there. These included embroidered depictions of saints, angels and Christ in a wide range of techniques but mostly metal thread and silk shading. There were also examples of kneelers, stoles, chasubles and a cope from the Collection.

For me, the highlight in this studio was the gold work on one of the chasubles (or the cope, I’m not sure which is which). The design included some jewel bright foils that looked like sweet papers and to my eye where a bit gaudy but the range of techniques and materials used in the design was impressive.

There were also samples of work by former apprentices on display in this studio. Of particular interest was a piece that had been very recently donated to the RSN and beside it a piece already in their collection of the same design. Although there is no record, it is thought to have been a teaching piece. The design is quartered by a diagonal cross with an angel in each quarter. Each of the four segments is worked by a different student using the same silk shading and gold work techniques. Neither piece is finished and on both, each student has worked the same amount of their segment, albeit the two pieces are stitched slightly differently.

In the second studio we were able to watch current diploma students working on current commissions including a new design and two pieces that were being restored. Of the exhibition pieces displayed in this studio the show stoppers were, without a doubt, the 12 Litany of Loreto pieces. They are exquisite! Little is known about them other than that they were stitched early in the twentieth century and that they were donated to the RSN when the convent that owned them was closing down. I had not heard of these embroideries before I read about them on Mary’s blog but her description whetted my appetite to see them. But nothing could have prepared me for how beautiful these embroideries are. They were smaller than I had expected at approximately 18 x 12 inches but this makes them all the more exceptional. As Mary described, they more like sketches than embroideries, but like sketches done by an old master in sepia and black and white tones. Each one is beautiful in its own right but displayed together they are stunning.

However, for Maggie and me, I think the most exciting and captivating item was hanging in a corridor between the two studios. The “Kyoto Panel” is one of the items on permanent display at the RSN. This may be because it is too large to store elsewhere, or it may be because it is too beautiful to hide from view! The panel is roughly 7-8 feet tall by maybe 5 feet wide and every millimetre is embroidered. The entire panel is covered by chrysanthemums – every type of chrysanthemum that you can imagine from the most humble daisy-like, single bloom to the big petalled, blousy blossoms. There are tight balled pompoms and loose limbed spider mums. There were all the techniques I’d expected to see and some that surprises me. The petals of the fullest, most luscious blooms were not only padded, but on top of the diagonal foundation there was a additional layer of padding and staggered diagonals to form a rib. Some of the flower centres were worked in turkey, or velvet, stitch – I have never seen this in any other Japanese embroidery - this was particularly effective where combined with Japanese round knots. Some of the pompom flowers were stitched with loops of twisted silk in a method I have not seen before. Every millimetre between the blossoms was filled swirls of couched gold. All together this embroidery is magnificent!

There were two disappointments of the day, one was not being able to take photographs, and the other was that Maggie’s schedule was so tight that we had no time to enjoy a cup of tea and chatter but we certainly enjoyed our tour of the RSN. Thank you, Maggie, for sharing your birthday present with me.

Monday, 8 April 2013

Tree Creepers - Finished

It was very important for me to complete this project and submit it for the Oxford Branch of the Embroiderers’ Guild Members’ exhibition. The theme of the show is “Five Minutes from Home”. The idea was to look for inspiration close to home. I did not even have to leave the house! A few years ago a large willow tree in the neighbouring school grounds was severely pollarded, it never recovered from the shock and died. The remaining trunk has slowly decayed but Mother Nature has been quick to reclaim the old tree as her own. Very soon the ivy began its invasion and I have watched it creep ever upwards. One of the many birds that visit the trunk every day is the tree creeper searching for insects within the fissures of the rotting wood. These two 'Tree Creepers' are the subject of my embroidery.


© Carol-Anne Conway

I am very pleased to have completed the embroidery but it is not as I had originally intended. Given time I would have thread painted all of the ivy leaves but I ran out of time and in the end had to be content with outlining some of the leaves. Although I like the finished design with the outlined leaves I feel discontented with it because it is not how I envisaged it. Yet I am contented that I found a way to 'finish' the design and submit it for the exhibition.


© Carol-Anne Conway

"Five Minutes from Home" is on display at the Vale & Downland Museum, Wantage, Oxon, OX12 8BL from 9 April - 4 May 2013, 10-4 Monday to Saturday. Admission is free.


© Carol-Anne Conway

Happy Stitching

Friday, 5 April 2013

The Ivy

Now there were only the ivy leaves to stitch but the deadline was drawing very close and I had other pressing matters to attend to! I would like to be able to write that I had planned to show the different developmental stages of the ivy leaves by the way that I stitched them but that is not the case. As time drew shorter it became apparent that I could not stitch all of the ivy leaves as I had originally intended. I was compelled by lack of time to devise an alternative plan.


© Carol-Anne Conway

I had already split stitched the outlines of some of the leaves and liked the way that they looked. I decided to thread paint a selection of the leaves but leave the rest of them as outlines.

© Carol-Anne Conway

Happy Stitching

Monday, 1 April 2013

The Tree Bark

The bark that still clings to the tree has a rougher texture than either the exposed wood or the tree creeper. I stitched an under layer of colour in long and short stitch but made the angle of the stitches more irregular than I normally would.

© Carol-Anne Conway

© Carol-Anne Conway

© Carol-Anne Conway

© Carol-Anne Conway

When I had finished I thought that the bark still looked too smooth so I over stitched with irregular cross stitches to rough it up a bit. It still does not have the course roughness that I was looking for and it is nowhere near as effective as the wonderful bark I saw in the Threads of Silk and Gold exhibition. I am slightly disappointed with this bit but don’t have time to rework it. The deadline was drawing close and I still had a lot of stitching to do.

Happy Stitching

Friday, 29 March 2013

The Eye, Beak and Feet

I was anxious about stitching the eyes, beak and feet. I felt that done well they would give my little tree creeper character; done badly, they would completely ruin the design. I turned to Trish Burr for help. Not Trish in person but the books by her that I have and also the stitching guide for the Chinese Flower. From those I selected an eye and a beak that I thought appropriate from my feathered friend and closely followed her instructions. I was very pleased with how they came out.


© Carol-Anne Conway


© Carol-Anne Conway

Many of Trish’s birds have bullion know feet. I did not think that they were appropriate for my bird, which has long talons on each of his toes. I decided to stitch them in a similar way to the beak, using the same colours. Again, I was rather pleased with them.

Happy Stitching

Monday, 25 March 2013

The Bird's Back

I was looking forward to stitching the bird’s back and wings even though I thought that the markings might prove challenging. I carried on working upward from the tail. The first challenge was working the distinctive bars on his wings. All of the needle painting I have done so far has focused on gradually blending from one shade to the next. These stripes required a more sudden colour change. I had to greatly reduce the staggering of the stitches and make them more like and overlapping satin stitch rather than the clear staggering used in long and short stitch. I was careful not to let the overlapping stitches become too bulky.

I did not think that this method would work so well for the speckling on his back so I first stitched all over with the darker shades of brown, blend the shades as I normally would. I then went back and overstitched with the paler shades, adding flecks and specks to give an impression of his markings rather than trying to faithfully copy every marking.

© Carol-Anne Conway

© Carol-Anne Conway

© Carol-Anne Conway

I am rather pleased with how they came out.

Happy Stitching

Sunday, 10 March 2013

The Bird's Tail

I will work from the tip of his tail to the top of his head so that the stitches lay one on top of the other as feathers do. His tail is more or less the one colour with a little shade variation to distinguish the individual tail feathers. I think they need defining more but I will wait until I have completed his back to see how things balance.


© Carol-Anne Conway

Happy Stitching