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Monday, March 23, 2015

Getting ready for Britain

This summer I'll be going back to Durham, UK to do my last module on my Royal School of Needlework Certificate of Technical Hand Embroidery.  I am so excited about it!  I'll be doing canvaswork, which is a type of embroidery that quite honestly I am not terribly familiar.  I have not done a lot of counted embroidery.  So, in order to prepare for my course, I've been reading a couple books that Tracy recommended to me, Canvas Work by Jennifer Gray and  Dictionary of Canvas Work Stitches by Mary Rhodes.  I also started sampling stitches yesterday and so far I really, really like this technique!  So far I have stitched 1 square experimenting with Straight Gobelin and Trammed Gobelin and 5.5 squares of Upright Gobelin in various color and material combinations.  I have tried just Appleton wools and mixing in some DMC and some silk too.  I'm working on a 18 tpi canvas in antique as this is what I will be working on this summer.  It is not a very subtle technique it seems.  It seems like you have to be a bit more aggressive in the shading for it to come through and make a difference, but I have a lot more sampling to do!

Any suggestions on stitches to try?  There are so many of them!  
Here's my "to-do" list so far:  Florentine, Hungarian, Diamond Satin, Parisan, Old Parisan, Chevron, Leaf Diaper, Milanese, 2-Layer Oblong Cross, Smyrna Cross, Windmill, Broad Cross, Rice, Oblong Rice, Plaited Stitch, Herringbone, Rococo, Paris, Tent, and Diamond Eyelet.  



5 comments:

  1. You must try Norwich stitch - it is so satisfying to do:
    http://www.stitcharena.com/library/canvas-embroidery/norwich-stitch/

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  2. Having survived this ! Also sample change sizes in a stitch and changing from one stitch to another for a clean transition !

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    Replies
    1. Hi Chloe! You must have read my mind. After looking at your RSN piece and many others, I was thinking that was going to be challenging. I started doing this the other day on a trial composition. It definitely goes a lot slower than just the squares in the same repeat! It feels a bit like figuring out a jigsaw puzzle! Did you sketch out all your transitions on grid paper first?

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  3. Yes I mapped a lot of it out in advance. But also a lot of sampling as I went along. The hardest part it blending one stitch to another whilst still shading . But you also have to increase ( or decrease) the size of a sitch . Use one stitch in a variety of ways

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  4. Don't forget you can't just use wool ( tempting) look at silks, rayon, cotton perle, my entire train is silk

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