Sunday, June 24, 2007
Best Intentions
I didn't however finish up the little gift I'm working on. It's coming along well and looks like I had hoped but rather than finish it hastily and do a bad job, Catherine will get it delivered by the postal person in the future, not me.
Labels: Life the Universe and Everything
Friday, June 22, 2007
Seriously Outdated
Excuse me, I don't think so. I feel a hissie fit coming on. One of the few things I miss in TN is the LA Garment District. Oh Levine's or F&S, couldn't you please open a TN branch?
Labels: Modern textiles
*fumes*
And if you complain, they'll smile nicely and explain to you that linen is a WEAVE
yeah.
:-(
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Little Things
No, I'm not taking up Grafitti. Got an idea for a little pressie to make for my friend Catherine before I leave. Can't share details just now, but if it is successful, I'll let you in on it when I return. She is always making things for me and I'd like to return the favor.
I'm always humbled when someone gives me a gift of the work of their hands and heart. Anyone can buy something off the shelf. I've received some very thoughtful gifts that were purchased through the years, but a hand crafted gift is special. It involves spending time and time is one of the most precious gifts we can offer anyone. Also, many people have found that whilst crafting a gift for a friend you seem to think of them during the process and weave that friendship magic into your art. I treasure gifts made for me. They stay about me and I see them every day and think of the special people who made them.
Labels: Life the Universe and Everything, Needlework Gifts
Summer Madness
Now you can vote on some of the hats ritually worn at the Ascot meet. Warning, you may have to click through to the slideshow if you have popups blocked. Personally, my fave is the butterflies, but you may go for the horses. Ivana Trump's choice looks like a pig's breakfast to me.
Monday, June 18, 2007
In My Dreams
Hey, fantasy is good for everyone.
Labels: Life the Universe and Everything
Tapestry Travels Home
You never know when a Tudor masterpiece may turn up.
Thanks to SCAtoday.net for the link
Labels: Bayeux Tapestry, English History, Tudor needlework
Getting Ready
Then it's on to Kansas City to meet with a group of stitchers who have kindly booked me as a tutor for the last few years. This year we are working with silk shading. Using soft, lustrous silks like a painter is an experience to tempt the senses. The silks arrived from the distributor today and I sat about this evening getting them all sorted and into kits. Silk ground fabric is ready to cut as well as muslin backing, needles here ready to get into kits, artists' transfer paper arrived.
All ready to finish kitting up and sending off to Catherine K. who is organizing the event.
Labels: Teaching Needlecraft
Saturday, June 16, 2007
A Rich Depository
One of my favorites remains the Women's Library collection of images of and concerning suffrage marching banners.
Waiver of responsibility - you may get lost poking about here and I won't be responsible!
Labels: Image collections, Political banners, Women's Library, Women's suffrage
Friday, June 15, 2007
I Wish I'd Said That
Virtual Territory
Thanks to Sharon B. for pointing out this new blog.
Labels: Design
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
And We All Came
Many groups have, over the years, founded cultural museums, libraries, fraternal groups, etc. And now, increasingly, these groups are establishing an online presence. sometimes very sophisticated, sometimes more humble, but almost always interesting.
For a look at Croatian heritage visit the Croatian Heritage Museum and Library pages. The museum located in Eastlake, Ohio mounts exhibits from time to time. One of their past exhibits was textile themed. It centered around the linens a bride might take as a dowry to a new home. A Dowry of Linens and Lace gives us a glimpse of what a traditional bride might have in her wedding chest.
The site has an extensive links page. If you are researching your Croatian heritage there are links to every sort of resource. Also there is a link to regional Croatian costume.
The entry page to the costume links (just click on any region for a look) has a band of folk embroidery that might have come directly from early modelbuchen.
The Bizovac region photograph boasts beautiful black on white embroidery and the headresses of Pag are reminiscent of mediaval headwear.
Labels: Croatian costume, Croatian needlework, Folk Costume, Folk embroidery
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Wild and Wonderful
This year my friend Robin Berry is suffering my presence over Thanksgiving and is gathering a group to be Wild and Wonderful during my visit. I'll also be lecturing at a Robin's local EGA group while on the West Coast. I'll be glad to put anyone interested in touch with Robin.
This year the Wild and Wonderful experience will focus on creating Artist's Trading Cards for exchanging with the group attending or other fiber friends.
For a look at ATCs check out Art In Your Pocket
Labels: Artist's Trading Cards, Needlework Workshops, Robin Berry, Wild and Wonderful
Bayeux Revisited
The battles go on concerning who stitched it, who commissioned it, how it ended, and all the other questions that plague us when we simply have no good answers about the history of a textile.
R. Howard Bloch has written a general overview of the history of the embroidery, the technique of the embroidery, the social and military history of the events depicted and adds a sprinkling of trivia. A Needle In The Right Hand of God (ISBN 1-4000-6549-6) Check around, there are discounted copies available.
For instance, do you know why the official keepers of the embroidery insist on continuing to use the term tapestry when we all know it is a work of embroidery?
Read the book and find out, but I do suggest you have at your elbow one of the other publications about the embroidery which has larger illustrations.
Labels: Bayeux Tapestry, Needlework history, R. Howard Bloch
Done, Finished
I've had in mind for some years a series of books dedicated to the various early printers of modelbuchen. A look at the patterns in their books that are readily stitched as counted thread designs.
The first one is finished. Twenty-one bands from Hans Hofer of Augsberg's New Formbuch’len of 1545. I've used software not previously available to me when preparing diagrams of double-running stitches. It is cumbersome but does the job. So each band has a black and white chart, a color coded chart, black and white stitch diagrams and colored stitch diagrams for any side journeys a few tips and tricks and a bit of text around the edges. 30+ pages of hard work my friends.
I sent the first 6 beta copies off to Catherine Kinsey for sale in her merchant stall at Lilies. Anyone who gets them will have unique copies because I've found a few page numbering wonkynesses which have not been corrected. Anyone owning one of those six copies who wants to trade it in for a tweaked copy in the future is welcome to do so. Linn's rule - you always find the little mistakes after the first batch has been printed and after you've proofed the master at least a dozen times. At least as a self-publisher, I can sit right down and fix them myself.
Labels: Blackwork, Modelbuch, Needlework history, Needlework Patterns
I've not noticed the wonkyness yet. But if it is just page numbering I think I can deal with it.
I've only paged through it quickly once so far, but it looks to be a lovely book and I am very excited to try the patterns out.
Let me know if you want to swap out that early copy - postage paid by me.
Friday, June 08, 2007
Shopping Opportunity
Colonial Needle imports a wide range of needles and craft tools from English manufacturers including John James, etc. Believe me if it has a point on it, they carry it. From the smallest in betweens to marlin spikes and sailmakers needles.
They've now gone retail online and you can find all these specialty needles on their site.
Labels: Colonial Needle, Needles, Needlework tools
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Visit Often
The Cleveland Museum of Art is a great example. They have expanded their online offerings greatly since my last visit. Their Textile Department offers 4385 works for your delight. Be sure to click on the More Information tab for full curatorial notes. Some objects have reverse images available and detail photographs. You can Zoomify some textiles and except for one exception I found the zoomed details extremely clear and sharp. Another interesting feature offers you the ability to interact with the department by suggesting labels/tags to help others find items more easily.
I managed to skim the thumbnails and listings for 500 items and to delve into far more than I should have - given my current time constraints. Some of my picks so far:
Embroidery from an altar frontal: Coronation of the Virgin. Exquisite Or Nue Italian, 15th Century. Zoomify and detail views available.
Altar Frontal: Scenes from the Childhood of Christ. Zoomify and detail views of front and reverse available. 16th century c.1500. France/South Netherlands - woven tapestry
Embroidered Panel, Italy, 16th 17th century
As usual, I waive all responsibility for your getting lost at this site.
Labels: Cleveland Museum of Art, Needlework history, Textile Collections
Wednesday, June 06, 2007
In the Spirit of the Past
I've long been interested in seeing how embroidery styles, techniques and aesthetics adapt to a colonial life. America, India, various Central and South American countries, South Africa and other African continent countries, Australia, New Zealand and many other countries have been swept up in expansionist periods of world history. Religion, mercantile ambition and political agenda have often played a role in colonization.
At this time a project is being pursued at the Plimoth Colony site in America. Embroiderers are gathering in workshop setting to stitch a ladies jacket very reminiscent of English costume examples still available for examination.
The site, The Embroiderers' Story is worth a visit. If nothing else take a look at the excellent articles and stitch diagrams by Tricia Wilson Nguyen.
Labels: Costume embroidery, English embroidery, Needlework history, Plimoth Colony, Tricia Wilson Nguyen
Tuesday, June 05, 2007
Medieval Glory
While you are there click back to the Virtual Panoramas site for all sort of 360 degree photography. Everything from classic architecture, historic sites and Carnival in Rio to Christmas in Prague and G8 demonstrations at Rostock.
Thanks to SCAtoday.net
Labels: Medieval art
Sunday, June 03, 2007
The Needlework Teacher's World
It's a tough world out there cookie! Here's a breakdown of what happens.
Consumer Shows
Teachers submit proposals to teach and a cost per student to the event organizer. This cost per student includes kit cost and teaching fees. If accepted, the teacher is paid after the event and must bear the costs of kitting and shipping any kits up front.
The teacher is responsible for his/her transportation to the event and all costs of lodging and meals as well as kit costs and any shipping involved.
The proposals need not usually be exclusive to the event although some organizers specify exclusivity. The rights to the design remain the teacher's.
Trade Shows
Teachers submit proposals to teach and if the project is accepted receive a small fee per registered student. $5-15 no matter the cost of the kit or the teaching time involved.
The project need not be exclusive but normally organizers require the teacher to grant permission for the attendees to freely copy class materials/designs and distribute them without compensating the teacher.
The theory is that teaching at trade shows is a marketing tool in which you invest money. Its purpose is not to make a profit.
Teachers must bear the cost of travel, lodging and meals.
Guild Teaching (ANG/EGA)
National guild organizations provide standard contracts for local branches to use. Teacher's compensation is limited to certain dollar amounts per program or workshop day or half-day. ANG/EGA chapters, regions and national organization normally pay the teacher's travel, lodging and meal expenses.
Chapters are not usually concerned with exclusivity of designs but for Regional and National events, designs must be proposed early on (usually 2 years in advance of the event) and must remain off the market (for either teaching or commercial sale) for a stated time after the event. This means a designs is for all practical purposes removed from the commercial market for three years.
Compensation includes kit costs (and guilds are often required to demand that each item in a kit be costed out and that the instructor meet the guild's understanding of the wholesale price for each needle, inch of linen or skein of thread).
Sampler Guilds
Are independent groups of like-minded stitchers. They contract with individual teachers for teaching fees and kit costs and seldom require exclusivity of design. They typically pay travel, lodging and meal expenses.
Private Tutoring
I teach groups and make individual arrangements with the organizer of such a group. We agree on the minimum number of paid participants, the cost of kit and fees per participant and the exclusivity of any design.
I normally pay my own travel expenses to the host city and am offered lodging and meals by group members in a home.
The group organizer arranges the teaching space (at no cost to me), solicits participants and collects kit costs and fees. For this service, I offer the organizer a space in the class at no cost to them.
Labels: Teaching Needlecraft
Don't You Hate It?
Working like mad on the new book and using new graphics. I thought I had them nailed, but they look like rubbish when printed in their final size. Gosh the screen lies to you. Okay, sorting them out slowly and re-coloring all of them.
Then I found that I missed even creating a couple of detail charts....BIG OOPS.
Off to bed. Back to work in the morning.
Labels: Life the Universe and Everything, Needlework Design
Sorry for you cause I know yours was important.
Friday, June 01, 2007
Lost in PreHistory
Hmmm. I've been lost in a book Women's Work, The First 20,000 Years -- Women, Cloth, and Society in Early Times by Elizabeth Wayland Barber. ISBN0 393 31348 4
A fascinating look at Neolithic, Palaeolithic, etc. textile history. Makes the archaelogical finds come to life. No, not some fictionalized fantasyland, but pretty solid gathering of available sources and making them available for understanding by the average reader.
I had bits of this history under my belt from other sources, but this is a great overview. Highly recommended.
Labels: Textile History