Showing posts with label embroidery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label embroidery. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Playful Free-Form Embroidery: Stitch Stories with Texture, Pattern & Color by Laura Wasilowski

Playful Free-Form Embroidery will inspire fiber artists to create their own pictorial stories. Laura Wasilowski's quilts are joyful, fun, and colorful. You can learn her techniques with the six patterns she includes in her book--and then get playing and make your own Stitched Story!

Paint the world with color! Wasilowski uses wool and wool felt for her applique and perle cotton for the embroidery embellishments. She has a gift for combining stitches and colors to create detailed, visually interesting quilts with lots of texture.
Below, ladybugs have a stairway to their nut house. 

This cheery bird on a pin cushion is adorable.
A black background always makes colors pop. It also shows up the details in the foliage. 
This sweet lamb greeting a bird would be lovely in a nursery!
What story do you want to tell? 


I received a free ebook from the publisher in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.

Playful Free-Form Embroidery: Stitch Stories with Texture, Pattern & Color
Laura Wasilowski
ISBN: 9781617459931
UPC: 734817-114086
eISBN: 9781617459948 Book ( $19.95 )
 eBook ( $15.99 

from the publisher

From the best-selling author of Joyful Stitching, Laura Wasilowski brings 6 new hand-embroidery projects with full-sized patterns and step-by-step pictorial directions. Bright and lively project designs include a whirling paint brush, a dancing bird, tea cups tipping, flowers blooming, a fuzzy sheep, and a happy acorn nut house. With the free-form embroidery approach, you can either follow the given directions, or allow your imagination to run wild and improv your own additions—there is no right or wrong! Plus, no special tools are needed—just felt or felted wool, perle cotton #12 and #8 threads, embroidery needles, and sewing equipment. Start your stitch story!

  • Stitch 6 textured projects with easy-to-follow free-form embroidery instructions
  • Each project features a unique stitch combination, including some wool applique
  • Finished creations are visually stunning art work that can be treasured for a lifetime

about the author

Laura Wasilowski loves fabric. Her first love was a sweet pink gingham fabric selected for a 4-H sewing project. As a college student, she discovered more exotic fabrics. And while she earned a degree in costume design, she found a new thrill - dyeing.

For many years Laura created hand-dyed fabrics for garments that she sold in boutiques across the country. It was a friendly neighbor who introduced Laura to her current flame, the art quilt. This latest love is a marriage of fabric, color, and whimsy that she truly enjoys.

Laura is married to her colorful husband, Steve. They are the proud parents of Gus and Louise. Laura lives in Elgin, IL, where she hand dyes fabric and thread for her business, Artfabrik.

Visit Artfabrik online: artfabrik.com

Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Machine Embroidered Art: Painting the Natural World with Needle & Thread by Alison Holt

Alison Holt's machine embroidered art will amaze you! She renders nature scenes in photographic detail, the foam of breakers on a rocky shore, a verdant meadow, or dappled forest floor depicted only with paint, needle, and thread.

Holt guides artists through her process in over 200 pages, lushly illustrated. 

Using photographs, she composes her scene, then paints it on silk. With straight and zig-zag stitches on her Bernina sewing machine, she creates layers of thread to detail the natural elements. 

Her book explains every step, from composition and color, how to blend and shade with thread, and how she combines the two basic thread stitches to create flowers, leaves, trees, water, and other elements. 
Holt guides you through her process in creating individual pieces, every step photographed and explained.
I was impressed by the detailed instructions. With study and practice, and easily obtained basic tools, readers should be able to create their own nature art. She is clearly a gifted teacher.
As a book of art, this is a pure delight. As a source of inspiration it is invaluable. 

I received a free book from the publisher through Amazon Vine in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.


Learn more about Holt at her website https://www.alisonholt.com/


About Alison Holt

Alison Holt, a UK contemporary textile artist with a Fine Art Embroidery BA Hons degree from Goldsmiths College, London, specialising in freehand machine embroidery.

Using a basic Bernina sewing machine and just 2 stitches, straight stitch and zig-zag I make embroidered pictures of landscapes, seascapes, flowers and garden scenes, influenced by the Shropshire Wales border near Oswestry where I live and by my travels.

Alongside the 5 books on my style of threadpainting and an educational DVD, Creative Machine Embroidery, I offer a range of textile courses, workshops, demonstrations and lectures in the UK and abroad.

I work to commission and have experience of exhibiting regularly at the Chelsea Flower Show and other venues in the UK, France and Australia.

Machine Embroidered Art: Painting the Natural World with Needle & Thread
By Alison Holt
Paperback $31.95
Published by Search Press
ISBN 9781782217916

from the publisher
Table of Contents
  • Introduction 
  • Materials & equipment 
  • Planning an embroidery 
  • Light 
  • Colour 
  • Creating backgrounds 
  • Starting to stitch 
  • Flowers and foliage 
  • Seascapes 
  • Trees and woodlands 
  • Index 
showcase for textile artist Alison Holt’s exquisite machine embroideries, this book will teach you to ‘paint’ your surroundings with thread.

Use thread to paint the world around you with free-motion embroidery. Alongside new examples of Alison Holt’s exquisite and distinctive machine embroideries, this book collects together her teachings and techniques for machine-embroidering flowers, woodlands, landscapes and seascapes.

A huge range of techniques and ideas are clearly explained using step-by-step photographs, and demonstrated through a selection of inspiring projects.

Learn how to create landscapes and seascapes of your own, and find inspiration through numerous examples of Alison’s original work.

Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Lynette's Best-Loved Stitcheries

Four Seasons Wall Hanging, 27" x 24", is on the cover
Lynette Anderson offers stitchers a new book filled with country cottage ambiance, with sweet bungalows and blooming gardens, angelic gardeners and adorable four-legged friends. She is inspired by the British country village of her childhood.

Lynette's Best-Loved Stitcheries: 13 Cottage-Style Projects You'll Adore includes
projects perfect for gifting and quilts to enhance your home's walls. Lynette loves to make projects that can be used every day.
Meadow Cottage Tote, 14" x 14". The tote includes inside pockets.
Sunshine and Flowers Pillow, 15 1/2" x 15 1/2"
I so love the use of applique and buttons and embellishments incorporated into the designs.
Lynette shares her techniques for transferring and marking embroidery designs, how to prevent thread shadowing, and includes a stitch guide. She explains how to use variegated floss successfully.
Count Your Blessings Mini-Quilt, 9 1/2" x 14"
Prairie Points enhance Lynette's needlecase holder and the scissors holder has a tassel cord, seen below. You learn so many techniques in this book!
Springtime Needle Case and Scissors Holder

Lynette shares her technique for giving fabric a vintage look by speckling, seen below in the Redwork pillows.

Redwork Pillows, 8 1/2" x 10"

Lynette offers a tutorial on her favorite applique techniques, turned-edge and Apliquick. The patterns are reversed so fusible applique can also be used.

I enjoy needle-turn applique myself but was interested to learn about Apliquick which uses semi-water-soluble paper and special rods to hold and roll turned edges of the applique pieces. Every stage of the process is shown in photographs and instructions.
One-Stitch-At-A-Time Sewing addy, 8" x 6" x 3 3/4"
The sewing caddy, above, has a hexagon back! Lynette includes English Paper Pieced hexagon instructions with photographs.
Potting Shed Journal Cover, 6 3/4" x 8 3/4", and Pencil Case, 8" x 5"
I love the oval insert on the Potting Shed Journal Cover, above. The lighter background for the embroidery makes it pop and the darker fabric frames it beautifully. The Hexie Pencil Case could also hold your needlework tools and threads!
Home Sweet Home Redwork,  3" x 6 1/2"
The book is sold as softcover and ebook with patterns available online to print.

I was given access to a free ebook by the publisher in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.

Visit Lynette's blog to keep up on her latest designs and news:
https://lynetteandersondesigns.typepad.com/
Lynette owns the Little Quilt Store in Australia where you can purchase her patterns and the tools, threads, and embellishments shown in the projects.
https://www.littlequiltstore.com.au/collections/all

Lynette's Best-Loved Stitcheries
by Lynette Anderson
Martingale
ISBN: 9781683560128
$27.99 softcover (-$8 ebook)
Publication Date: July 1st, 2019

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Threads of Life by Claire Hunter

"Sewing has a visual language. It has a voice. It has been used by people to communicate something of themselves--their history, beliefs, prayers and protests."~ from Threads of Life by Claire Hunter

Twenty-eight years ago I made my first quilt and it changed my life. As I honed my skills I was inspired by historic and traditional quilts but also by art quilts.

Early on I dreamed of being able to make quilts that represented my values, interests, and views. I eagerly learned new skills, from hand embroidery and hand quilting to surface design, machine thread work, and fusible applique. I have been making a series of quilts on authors I love. I have created a Pride and Prejudice storybook quilt, an Apollo 11 quilt, and embroidered quilts of the First Ladies, Green Heros, and women abolitionists and Civil Rights leaders.
With my quilt I Will Life My Voice Like A Trumpet,
2013 AQS Grand Rapids quilt show

I was excited to be given an egalley of Claire Hunter's book Threads of Life: A History of the World Through the Eye of a Needle. 

Hunter identifies themes in needlecraft including power, frailty, captivity, identity, connection, protest, loss, community, and voice. She shares a breathtaking number of stories that span history and from across the world.

Hunter begins with the history of the Bayeux Tapestry, a panel of wool embroidery showing scenes from the Battle of Hastings in 1066. Its history illustrates the ups and downs in cultural attitudes toward needlework.
detail from Bayeux Tapestry 

It was forgotten, nearly upcycled, and used for a carnival float backdrop. Napoleon put it in a museum until it fell out of fashion and was again relegated to storage here and there. Himmler got a hold of it during WWII and publicized the artifact and saved it from destruction. Then the French Resistance took possession of the Louvre and the tapestry.

900 years later, the tapestry attracts thousands of viewers every year, a worldwide cultural icon, and inspired The Games of Thrones Tapestry.

Yet, we don't know who designed the tapestry or embroidered it, the challenges and tragedies they faced. They remain anonymous.

I was familiar with the Changi prison camp quilts created during WWII by women POWs in Japanese camps. Hunter explains how the women created images with personal and political meaning to tell loved ones they survived.
quilt made in the Changi Prison Camp

I have seen Mola reverse applique but did not know it was an invention of necessity. Spanish colonists in Panama and Columbia insisted the indigenous women cover their chests. Traditionally, the women sported tattoos with spiritual symbols which they transferred to fabric. In many cultures, cloth has a spiritual element.
Mola Blouse, c. 1990, from the International Quilt Museum
Hunter also touches on Harriet Power's Bible Quilt, Gees Bend quilters, the Glasgow School of Art Department of Needlework, and Suffragists banners.

There was much that was new to me. How  Ukrainian embroidery was forbidden under Soviet rule as they systematically dismantled cultural traditions. Or how the Nazis used Jewish slave labor to sew German uniforms and luxury clothing.

Hunter tells stories from history and also how needle and thread are employed today as therapy and as community engagement and to voice political and feminist statements. She tells the memorable story of guiding male prisoners in the making of curtains for a common room and how she worked with groups, Austrian Aboriginies and Gaelic women, to make banners addressing displacement and community disruption.

We also read about the history of sewing, the impact of industrialization and the rise of factory production, the home sewing machine, the shift from skilled craft to homemade decorative arts.

Art quilters and textile artists like Faith Ringgold and Judy Chicago are discussed.

Social awareness needlework included the quite well known Aids Quilt but also the little known banner The Ribbon, created to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Justine Merritt organized the sewing of peace panels to be stitched together. 25,000 panels were made. 20,000 people collected on August 4, 1985, to wrap the 15-mile long Ribbon around the Pentagon, the Arlington Memorial Bridge, the Lincoln Memorial, and to the Capital and back to the Pentagon. The media and President Reagen ignored it.

Threads of Life may seem an unusual book, a niche book, but I do think it has a wide appeal that will interest many readers.

I was given access to a free egalley through NetGalley in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.

Threads of Life: A History of the World Through the Eye of a Needle
by Clare Hunter
ABRAMS
Pub Date 01 Oct 2019
ISBN 9781419739538
PRICE $26.00 (USD)

from the publisher

A globe-spanning history of sewing, embroidery, and the people who have used a needle and thread to make their voices heard 

In 1970s Argentina, mothers marched in headscarves embroidered with the names of their “disappeared” children. In Tudor, England, when Mary, Queen of Scots, was under house arrest, her needlework carried her messages to the outside world. From the political propaganda of the Bayeux Tapestry, World War I soldiers coping with PTSD, and the maps sewn by schoolgirls in the New World, to the AIDS quilt, Hmong story clothes, and pink pussyhats, women and men have used the language of sewing to make their voices heard, even in the most desperate of circumstances. 

Threads of Life is a chronicle of identity, protest, memory, power, and politics told through the stories of needlework. Clare Hunter, master of the craft, threads her own narrative as she takes us over centuries and across continents—from medieval France to contemporary Mexico and the United States, and from a POW camp in Singapore to a family attic in Scotland—to celebrate the age-old, universal, and underexplored beauty and power of sewing. Threads of Life is an evocative and moving book about the need we have to tell our story. 

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Blended Embroidery: Combining Old & New Textiles, Ephemera & Embroidery

I love the idea behind Blended Embroidery by Brian Haggard. His art is a collage of textiles, vintage images, and ephemera printed on textiles, embroidery, and embellishments.

The Lacemaker by Brian Haggard
Haggard loves finding old pieces and repurposing them. His studio is filled with buttons, beads, laces, trims, threads, and textile pieces--even imperfect pieces.

Haggard shows how to make free form embroidered leaves and embroidered felt flowers, soft bows, walnut stained fabrics, photo imaging, attaching doilies and printed images.
Pincushions and sachets made of vintage images scanned on fabric
Chapters include

  • Where to Look for Blended Embroidery Inspiration
  • But It Looks Like Trash
  • Materials, Fabrics, and Supplies
  • Basic Stitches 


Projects include

  • The Lace Maker
  • Paisley Proper
  • Scissor Sheath and Scissors Holder
  • Pincushion
  • Travel Bag
  • Renaissance Revival
  • Friendship Pincushions and Sachets
  • Sewing Butler 


A Galley and About the Author is included.
Scissors holder and pincushion
Many of the Galley projects are a form of crazy quilting. The creativity is inspiring! I especially love the quilts that include antique family portraits printed on fabric!

Haggard's previous books included Crazy Quilted Memoires and Embroidered Memories. Visit Haggard's website at http://www.brianhaggard.com/

I received access to a free ebook in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.

Blended Embroidery: Combining Old & New Textiles, Ephemera & Embroidery
Brian Haggard
Book ( $27.95  ) eBook ( $22.99 )
SBN: 978-1-61745-809-5
UPC: 734817-113393
(eISBN: 978-1-61745-810-1)

Wednesday, February 27, 2019

The Gown by Jennifer Robson

Subtitled, A Novel of the Royal Wedding, Jenifer Robson's novel The Gown imagines the women who embroidered Princess Elizabeth's 1947 wedding gown.

Heather is surprised when she inherits samples of embroidery from her grandmother. She had no idea her grandmother could do such beautiful work. Discovering that the samples match the embroidery on Princess Elizabeth's wedding gown, Heather goes on a quest to resurrect her beloved grandmother's buried past.

Alternating chapters tell Heather's story and that of her grandmother Anne and her friend Miriam Dassin. The reader is returned to 1947 London and the lingering effects of the war. Patriotism and support for the royal family were at a high and the royal wedding of Princess Elizabeth filled the people with expectation, brightening the country with joy.

The winning wedding gown design went to Paul Hartnell, a favorite designer of the queen. The women created the elaborate applique and embroidery under strict orders to not talk about their work.

Ann Hughes was a lead embroiderer when Miriam Dassin is hired and put under Ann's tutelage. Miriam worked for a prestigious French fashion house before Germany took over her country. The women become roommates and fast friends. Miriam holds her past and Jewish heritage a close secret.

One fatal night Ann and Miriam join their coworkers at a dance where they meet the men who would change their lives--for better or worse.

I enjoyed the detailed descriptions of the actual work process of appliqueing the satin on the tulle. 

Ann holds Harnell's pattern to the window and traces the design onto a piece of onionskin paper. She then cut the design out and aligns it with the drawing to check it is true. The pattern is placed on the satin fabric and using a needle with its blunt end set into a cork, Ann punches the needle into the fabric along the edge of the pattern piece, the needle separating the weave of the satin to mark the perimeter. With sharp scissors, Anne cuts along the perforated lines to make the applique shape. To attach the applique to the tulle she needle-turned the edges, the tip of the needle turning under the edge of the shape, and with tiny stitches and silk thread, sews it into place onto the silk tulle. After the applique was completed, the embroidery with pearls and beads and diamonds began.

As a needle-turn appliquer, I am familiar with the process. Thankfully, I work with easier materials. 

Silk thread is fine and results in near-invisible applique stitches, but it is challenging to work with. It is so fine I can hardly see it and it easily slips out of the needle eye. The satin used for the gown has a dense weave but was resistant to taking a crease. So she could not prepare the applique shapes with one of the many methods I use, resorting to needle-turn. This means using the tip of the needle to turn under the very edge of the shape, working in extremely small increments. The seamstress must be careful not to fray the edge of the applique shape, rolling threads under to be caught.

Using tulle as an applique base is also difficult. I am used to a woven fabric as an applique base and the needle gently separates the threads. But tulle is not a densely woven fabric, but a net or mesh fabric. The openings in the tulle gives the needles less to anchor to. I tried to applique on nylon tulle and could not get a smooth edge to the applique!

Not only where these materials challenging to work with, but the physical demands of the work had to be exhausting. The eye strain from hours of close work, the fabrics and threads all the same color, the reaching to work on a tambour frame, I can imagine the resulting muscle and joint pain! 

That the ensemble was completed in such a short time is amazing.

The novel will appeal to readers of historical fiction and women's fiction, Anglophiles, and anyone interested in fashion history. 

I won a book from the Book Club Cookbook.

Learn more and see photos of the gown at
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/05/27/the-queens-wedding-and-coronation-dresses-to-be-displayed-togeth/

Read an article by Jennifer Robson's at
http://time.com/5457007/queen-elizabeth-wedding-dress/

The Gown: A Novel of the Royal Wedding
By Jennifer Robson
William Morrow, 9780062884275, 400pp.
Publication Date: December 31, 2018
List Price: 26.99*

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Patchwork Loves Embroidery: Small Quilts and Gifts

I had been quilting for about fifteen years when I decided to relearn embroidery. I had learned the basics as a Brownie, but that was the last time I put needle to floss. 

My first project was The President's Quilt by Michael J.Buckingham! George Washington looks pretty sad, but by the time I got to Bill Clinton I had embroidery down pat.

I have enjoyed mixing quilting and embroidery ever since. And so do many of the gals in my weekly quilt group.

Australian quilter and embroiderer Gail Pan's new book offers fourteen projects that will win your heart. Many are perfect for gifts. Some you won't want to five up. Like this adorable sewing theme collage that includes vintage buttons, supplies, and trim with embroidery.
Memories of Sewing, 12 1/2" x 13 1/2", framed. 
Bees have become a favorite theme in recent years as a reaction to the environmental threats they face. This sweet wall hanging has an attractive appliqued frame. 


Beautiful Bees, 17 1/2" x 20 1/2"
Needlecrafters will love this needlecase with a butterfly. The folded case, when open, has pockets for your small scissors and supplies and a piece of wool to slide your needles into for safe keeping. It closes up with a ribbon. So simple!  

Butterfly Stitches, 4" x 4"
The quilters I know love to make totes to carry their projects in. Gail's tote has sweet flowers and simple patchwork, a nice long handle, and boxed bottom.
Pretty Floral Tote, 18" x 14 1/2" x 3"
Can you ever have too many pouches? I have one in my purse with my essentials. I keep my jewelry in them. I use them to carry sewing supplies for my projects. Gail's version features a bicycle with a floral basket, a beloved theme that is so popular today. In the pocket she has a thimble and other supplies.
On the Go Pouch, 7 1/2" x 7" folded
This small wallhanging has a 'sampler' theme, which Gail has made in bluework.
Love and Dreams Wall Hanging, 16 1/2" x 19 1/2"
I have a friend who just loves rabbits. You will love this bouquet-carrying rabbit with its oversized floppy ears. Skip the wrapping paper and put your gifts into this delightful bag.
Bunny Delights Bag, 8" x 10"
Another popular theme is snowmen. You can decorate with snowmen all winter long. Gail's table topper has snowmen and snowflakes with a simple patchwork pattern in reds. You can use blue, too, or even whites printed with snowflakes.
All Around the Snowmen Table Topper, 26 1/2" by 26 1/2"
Other projects include Pretty in Blue Pincushion, Pumpkins and Sunflowers pillow, Wildflowers Table Runner, Just Sew Sewing Keeper, Teatime Table Runner, and Delightful Dresdens Wall Hanging--with embroidered Dresdens.

General instructions for embroidery and quilting are included, along with lots of photos and pictures. Links to online patterns to print and how-to instructions are provided in the ebook.

Learn more about Gail and see her other patterns at her website Gail Pan Designs.

Patchwork Loves Embroidery
Gail Pan
That Patchwork Place
ISBN:v9781604689006, 1604689005
Paperback
$25.99 USD, £22.99 GBP

from the publisher:
Best-selling author Gail Pan returns with a new collection of designs that are a dream to embroider and a delight to admire! Inspired by Gail's daily walks, an abundance of sweet motifs includes bees and bunnies, houses and hearts, and her signature bird, leaf, and vine stitcheries. New to embroidery? Learn just eight simple stitches to create any project in the book. Choose from a pillow, pouch, pincushion, and tote, plus wall hangings, table toppers, and sewing-related items. Enjoy your finished projects at home or give them as gifts--you'll want to make them all!

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Celebrate Yuletide with Embroidery from Kathy Schmitz

Last fall I fell in love with Kathy Schmitz's Stitches from the Harvest. Now it is time to start your projects for Christmas! And Kathy has come up with adorable embroidery patterns to celebrate the Yuletide.

Stitches for the Yuletide includes fifteen projects with winter themes including snowman and deer and holly and pine bows. There are patterns for a sachet, a tea cozy, gift tags, embroidered tea towels, ornaments, wall art, hangings, a notions holder and a needle book, pillows, and table runner. 

 You can adorn your home or create gifts to give.

Kathy's sketches and watercolor paintings, photos of the projects and decor ideas adorn the pages of instructions.
My favorite is this wonderful stocking. The embroidery stitch is not hard, but the end product is spectacular.
Kathy includes stitch diagrams, instructions on cord making, and a conversion chart for the floss she used in the projects and the easily available DMC floss and sources for supplies.

She uses kitchen towels from Miller's Dry Goods in Millersburg, OH (MIllersDryGoods.com). After reading Stitches from the Harvest I placed an order and bought a pile of towels. They are just wonderful.

I received a free ebook from the publisher in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.


Stitches from the Yuletide
by Kathy Schmitz
On Sale Date: May 15, 2018
ISBN 9781604688955, 1604688955
Paperback |  80 pages
$25.99 USD, £22.99 GBP
e-book also available