Mother's Day will come round before we know it.
Here in the UK it's on the 10th of March.
I had an idea for a boot as a gift for Mothering Sunday.
Building on my success with stitching card to felt, I added a very pretty image of a Flower seller to my cut out felt shape. I printed a Vintage image onto linen weave card and cut close enough to the edge to be able to stich it onto the backing felt.
I'm now waiting for the last order of tiny silk 4mm ribbon to completely finish her, as I want to add some tiny flowers to her tray and her hair.
Apart from that she is done.
She was stitched to pink half wool, half acrylic felt as I thought this might keep the shape better than all wool felt, once paper was added to it.
Then it was a matter of adding the Edwardian lace panel to the top to form the cuff of the boot. I cut a small heart in white felt and covered that too, in the dark ecru lace and this was added to the toe of the boot and padded. Before all this my signature diaper pattern was stitched in back stitch to the boot surface in a lovely hand dyed variegated thread, tones of blue through green to pink and lavender. At every join there is a lovely modern 'mucky green' star sequin with an old pearl seed bead in the centre.
The word Mother was then embroidered by hand on the toe in soft pink.
I cut out lots of green leaves and embroidered the veins with a soft but dark green thread. These form the basis for the flower arrangements, all three, on the surface of the boot.
Hand made felt flowers in white, cream, pink and peach are clustered in bunches to which are added silk ones in a silver threaded pink and a plain cream. Both of these have the edges pulled to fray them
I cut pieces of the Edwardian lace and curled it into flowers and added a pearl bead in soft shades of green to the middles. Very effective. It just ties in the lace theme a bit further.
Then the tiny silk ribbon, of which I took delivery last week, was made into minute flower clusters and sewn at the base of the flowers.
Then dozens of tiny bead and sequins were dotted here and there. All round the edge of the boot and over the surface.There are bugle beads( long ones ) in real Mother of Pearl which were once on a jumper I picked up at a jumble sale in the 70's. The blue sequins, however are very special. And I only have a few.
Those who follow this blog will know that my friend Vivienne, who died on her 40th birthday when I was only in my twenties, left me her life's collection of lace, trims beads, sequins and wotnots in her will. I am now using a lot of these treasures. I haven't really had the projects or time before now, to do so and besides, the Vintage movement has given me the spur hasn't it?
She catalogued every little piece - where she bought it, how much she paid for it and what exactly it was ( she was a bit of an expert on haberdashery.) This was in the days when no one wanted these things. She frequented jumble sales, auctions houses, flea markets and what we used to call second hand shops. There were no charity shops in those days. People cleared houses and either threw these beautiful things away or they went for a song, to someone like my friend Vivienne, who knew their true worth.
So these little blue sequins ( I also have green and silver ) are early pieces...who really knows how old? Vivienne catalogued them as mica sequins 19th century. Now Mica is a naturally formed organic rock which shales easily and it was often used as glass in early dolls houses, as water on early embroideries, such as Stumpwork caskets and on beautiful evening dresses of the Victorian/ Edwardian era. I'm sure she thought these had once adorned such a dress.
Now they are adorning my creation.
I'm sure some well thought of Mother would love to receive this as a gift on Mother's Day.
And thank you Vivienne, for your gift too. A very special gift.
Friday, 25 January 2013
Sunday, 20 January 2013
Coming Round Again.
We all know that there has been a resurgence in the arts of the Vintage era... from the late 1800's to the 30's and beyond with Retro to the 80's.
I've tried my hand at something which my Mother made when she was a lass of 6!It all comes round again.
There was, for quite a while, a fashion for ladies in crinolines in flower gardens, on tea cloths, chair backs, table cloths and the such. Patterns for these appear in those lovely old magazines you can pick up for a song in antique and curio shops. You also find the real thing in the form of second hand tea cloths and the like in Vintage shops and at fairs. Most of the stitchery is fairly easy...lazy daisy stitch seems to prevail and there is a plethora of Hollyhocks, Delphiniums and Lupins.
This is part of the pattern my Mum had. It comes from a magazine called the Home Journal from 1934 - May the 12th to be precise.
I took this and made it into a design for a Flower Garden Hearfelt heart.
The basic design is there though I did add a little cottage once I had begun to stitch. I thought it needed it.
The lady was made in pink and buff felt in several pieces which were then all cobbled together with a slip stitch. Beads were added to the flowers on her dress and to the underskirt. Then the whole thing was padded lightly. Her bonnet is padded too.
Real silk ribbon hangs free as her bonnet strings blow in the breeze. The flowers are embroidered and beads are added to make them stand out. The gravel path on which the lady stands are tiny seed beads and French knots. The white felt heart was embroidered by hand with a back stitch in green, in a diaper pattern ( fast becoming a signature of my felt work I think ) and at the crossings tiny sequins with a sparkly bead were added to each.
The cottage was cut out of several coloured felts and all were pieced together with slip stitch and were embroidered over to give a three D appearance. Needless to say, that too was padded and beads added to provide us with roses round the door and a border of little flowers in front.
Lastly a little bird was created. I decided that he had to be a male Linnet as they are very Victorian birds and they were often kept in cages at this time as the male of the species sings so beautifully.
He is flying over head with a small flower in his beak. I like my birds free ( as you can tell from the side bar ;) )
He was made from several pieces of buff and grey felt and his feather were stitched in long stitch, in the appropriate colours of embroidery threads.
Then he too was padded ready to be added to the background, the first heart shape when the whole things has been surrounded with a frill of lace.
Once the lace had been gathered onto the edge of the white heart, a slightly bigger one of pink felt was stitched to the back and the pre- made felt flowers stitched to the edge.
I had made these flowers, with bead centres, and set them aside for the last phase. I cut them out on the Bigshot and layered them in pinks and white to echo the colour of the bird and the lady's crinoline.
The little bird was attached and the stem of the flower embroidered. All that had to happen now was the white background, which stiffens the whole thing, had to be stitched on and the ribbon hanger attached.
So, a 2013 take on a 1930's take on a Victorian flower garden.
How everything comes round if you wait long enough.
I've tried my hand at something which my Mother made when she was a lass of 6!It all comes round again.
There was, for quite a while, a fashion for ladies in crinolines in flower gardens, on tea cloths, chair backs, table cloths and the such. Patterns for these appear in those lovely old magazines you can pick up for a song in antique and curio shops. You also find the real thing in the form of second hand tea cloths and the like in Vintage shops and at fairs. Most of the stitchery is fairly easy...lazy daisy stitch seems to prevail and there is a plethora of Hollyhocks, Delphiniums and Lupins.
This is part of the pattern my Mum had. It comes from a magazine called the Home Journal from 1934 - May the 12th to be precise.
I took this and made it into a design for a Flower Garden Hearfelt heart.
The basic design is there though I did add a little cottage once I had begun to stitch. I thought it needed it.
Real silk ribbon hangs free as her bonnet strings blow in the breeze. The flowers are embroidered and beads are added to make them stand out. The gravel path on which the lady stands are tiny seed beads and French knots. The white felt heart was embroidered by hand with a back stitch in green, in a diaper pattern ( fast becoming a signature of my felt work I think ) and at the crossings tiny sequins with a sparkly bead were added to each.
The cottage was cut out of several coloured felts and all were pieced together with slip stitch and were embroidered over to give a three D appearance. Needless to say, that too was padded and beads added to provide us with roses round the door and a border of little flowers in front.
Lastly a little bird was created. I decided that he had to be a male Linnet as they are very Victorian birds and they were often kept in cages at this time as the male of the species sings so beautifully.
He is flying over head with a small flower in his beak. I like my birds free ( as you can tell from the side bar ;) )
He was made from several pieces of buff and grey felt and his feather were stitched in long stitch, in the appropriate colours of embroidery threads.
Then he too was padded ready to be added to the background, the first heart shape when the whole things has been surrounded with a frill of lace.
Once the lace had been gathered onto the edge of the white heart, a slightly bigger one of pink felt was stitched to the back and the pre- made felt flowers stitched to the edge.
I had made these flowers, with bead centres, and set them aside for the last phase. I cut them out on the Bigshot and layered them in pinks and white to echo the colour of the bird and the lady's crinoline.
The little bird was attached and the stem of the flower embroidered. All that had to happen now was the white background, which stiffens the whole thing, had to be stitched on and the ribbon hanger attached.
So, a 2013 take on a 1930's take on a Victorian flower garden.
How everything comes round if you wait long enough.
Thursday, 10 January 2013
Round and Round in Circles
I have been sorting the study.
Not an easy task.
But I have achieved some sort of order after the Christmas chaos.
I've also found a huge amount of 'stuff' which I had forgotten all about. With sighs of " Oh that's where you went " and exclamations of " Ooohh I remember that," I have been on a journey of discovery through bits and pieces. <3
It's very good for the imagination, excellent inspiration but it doesn't get the kitchen cupboards cleaned out does it....which was also my intention this week.
I've also come to a decision.
I think that paper is rather passé. Ideas just seems to go round and round in circles. No...perhaps not the way I work paper on BoxCleva, which is, I have to say rather unique, but boxes and bags I think, as a topic have had their day. So I am going to sell off a lot of my paper working things and concentrate on the flowers I make here and on the work I am developing on Heartfelt, my latest idea and that which I was promising you on my last post. At the moment it's only available on Facebook but we'll see....
When I began my paper journey, there were few boxes or bags about. Now they are everywhere. Thanks to the television and to all those magazines and not least, to these machines which cut everything at the touch of a button. Now, I can't compete with those. I do most of my stuff by hand. I like to do most of it by hand. The only thing I might use to help me is a BigShot machine and some dies and of course, some punches.
SO the Tapestry Stamps stay, so do most of the punches and many of the flower dies. I have already sold off most of my other dies. Other things will go as time allows.
The other thing I have been doing of course is making silk flowers and those will stay on here, on Gather Ye Rosebuds.....along with the projects they decorate.
Experimentation has been going on in this field too, over the Christmas break and shortly after. ( Remember for me, Christmas lasts twelve days!). I've been playing with felt and trying to make different shapes of three dimensional flowers with it. The same techniques which are used for paper can be adapted for felt, I've found. Let's go round and round in circles here too.
The circular rose, which I taught you all to make on BoxCleva can be made in felt. Go here for he tutorial. Wars of the Roses
If you crimp the edge with a pair of deckle scissors or pinking shears, you get a frilly rose.
If you snip into the cut circle every so often, you get a flatter flower with distinct petals.
If you cut scallops, the result is more like a tulip.
This is a scallop cutter which will do it for you should you like to buy it.I have to say it's not an easy shape to achieve by hand but it can be done with pinking shears and small sharp scissors.
Go here to buy.
Oyster Stamps.co.uk
If you cut the circle with a pair of pinking shears and then every second point snip into the piece at an angle, you will get a very pretty little lotus type flower.
I'll pass on more of my experimentation to you later on.
Now for those cupboards....I can hear them calling to me.........
Not an easy task.
But I have achieved some sort of order after the Christmas chaos.
I've also found a huge amount of 'stuff' which I had forgotten all about. With sighs of " Oh that's where you went " and exclamations of " Ooohh I remember that," I have been on a journey of discovery through bits and pieces. <3
It's very good for the imagination, excellent inspiration but it doesn't get the kitchen cupboards cleaned out does it....which was also my intention this week.
I've also come to a decision.
I think that paper is rather passé. Ideas just seems to go round and round in circles. No...perhaps not the way I work paper on BoxCleva, which is, I have to say rather unique, but boxes and bags I think, as a topic have had their day. So I am going to sell off a lot of my paper working things and concentrate on the flowers I make here and on the work I am developing on Heartfelt, my latest idea and that which I was promising you on my last post. At the moment it's only available on Facebook but we'll see....
When I began my paper journey, there were few boxes or bags about. Now they are everywhere. Thanks to the television and to all those magazines and not least, to these machines which cut everything at the touch of a button. Now, I can't compete with those. I do most of my stuff by hand. I like to do most of it by hand. The only thing I might use to help me is a BigShot machine and some dies and of course, some punches.
SO the Tapestry Stamps stay, so do most of the punches and many of the flower dies. I have already sold off most of my other dies. Other things will go as time allows.
The other thing I have been doing of course is making silk flowers and those will stay on here, on Gather Ye Rosebuds.....along with the projects they decorate.
Experimentation has been going on in this field too, over the Christmas break and shortly after. ( Remember for me, Christmas lasts twelve days!). I've been playing with felt and trying to make different shapes of three dimensional flowers with it. The same techniques which are used for paper can be adapted for felt, I've found. Let's go round and round in circles here too.
The circular rose, which I taught you all to make on BoxCleva can be made in felt. Go here for he tutorial. Wars of the Roses
If you crimp the edge with a pair of deckle scissors or pinking shears, you get a frilly rose.
If you snip into the cut circle every so often, you get a flatter flower with distinct petals.
If you cut scallops, the result is more like a tulip.
This is a scallop cutter which will do it for you should you like to buy it.I have to say it's not an easy shape to achieve by hand but it can be done with pinking shears and small sharp scissors.
Go here to buy.
Oyster Stamps.co.uk
If you cut the circle with a pair of pinking shears and then every second point snip into the piece at an angle, you will get a very pretty little lotus type flower.
I'll pass on more of my experimentation to you later on.
Now for those cupboards....I can hear them calling to me.........
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