Sunday, October 07, 2007

Options ... in hardanger: Dale Sokolow, designer




Options ... in hardanger is an EGA GCC (Group correspondence class) and has been designed by Dale Sokolow.

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This is my second hardanger course, the first one having been "Beginner's hardanger" with Marion Scoular. It really helped a lot for me to have taken Marion's beginner's course first as it gave me a good basic knowledge of hardanger before tackling something like this.

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I was also exposed to two different ways of doing hardanger. With Marion, the project was done without any hoop or frame and with Dale it was suggested that we used a frame.

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My preference seems to go with using a frame as I was much better able to control the regularity of my stitches. I had to remove the frame and do 2 fillings because they both had picots in them and those can't be done using the frame and I had problems with regularity of my stitches. That could have been made worst as I had done the whole piece with the frame and bang had to switch just like that and do the last two fillings holding the fabric in my hand.


I must say that I have learned a lot with these two projects.

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I still have to cut the fabric around the border before it is considered all completed.

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Pierrette =^..^=

Monday, September 24, 2007

Virtual Book Tour: Janet M. Perry Guest Blogging: An Article about Painted Canvas


Throughout the month of September, Janet M. Perry has been visiting needlework-related blogs and shops, which is part of her special celebration for her new book called "Needlepoint Trade Secrets" and I am so happy to have Janet as a special guest on my blog today that I have rushed to make you all a little "virtual" cup so that you can have a nice cup of tea or coffee while you are making yourselves confortable to read the wonderful and instructive article that was written for this occasion.

Janet asked me what I would be interested in for her article on my blog. I thought for a brief moment and said "Painted Canvas" (as this is a weak point of mine), the mysteries of painted canvas for the stitchers, meaning how to tackle them - what stitches to use - what threads to use - are there any books that tell us, for example, if you want to stitch snow, you could use this stitch or that one and either this thread or that one and that would give you the effect you are looking for. I quickly got an answer back from Janet saying that she would be happy to write a short article for us about that topic.

Janet, before I leave the floor to you, I would like to thank you very much for thinking about doing this Virtual Book Tour. It has been fun to go along with you on each visit.

Pierrette =^..^=

Here is the article written by Janet M. Perry about Painted Canvas:

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PAINTED CANVAS

Janet says:

Stitching a painted canvas looks so easy. The colors are picked out for you and all you need to do is add threads and stitches -- so why is it that so often we are not happy with the results?

Since I discovered painted canvas (in the early 80's) I've stitched hundreds of them, I even dream about canvases, threads, and stitches. As a result I've figured out some guidelines for stitching them which make it easier to do.

First I think about threads. Your canvas gives you color, but not texture. And for any given color a number of threads exist in different textures. For me, I try to pick a thread with a texture similar to what the object is in real life. For example snow, should be a white or clear sparkly thread. My favorite for this (and for stars as well) is Nordic Gold from Rainbow Gallery. I like this lightness of the thread, it's softness and it's sparkle. For hair, I like Rainbow Tweed because it has some variation in it and has just enough furiness to look realistic.



"Snuggles" (photo provided by Janet to illustrate snow)
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The texture of the thread determines how easily it will be noticed on the finished canvas. Furry or fuzzy threads are always seen first. Metallics are just slightly less noticeable than furry threads. The more matte a thread is, the less obvious it is. So the same color thread in pearl cotton, floss and Silk & Ivory will be most noticeable in pearl cotton and least in Silk & Ivory.
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Once you have picked out your threads, double check that you haven't picked out an attention-grabbing thread for an area which should be in the background.
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But I've learned by trial and error, I don't know of any books which really spell this out.
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Then I look at the canvas. Every canvas should have some areas of Tent Stitch in it. Sometimes the choice is made for you, for example faces almost always look best in Tent Stitch. Tent Stitch gives the eye a place to rest and is the neutral texture in needlepoint. It's kind of like zero on a number line.



"Jack Russell" (photo provided by Janet to illustrate Tent Stitch)
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Once I know where Tent Stitch will be placed, I can then rank other spaces as being higher or lower than those areas. Lower spaces should have flatter or more open stitches. For these I use stitches like T Stitch, or techniques like Blackwork or Pattern Darning. For example, I almost always use Pattern Darning for skies, because the flatter stitch makes the sky look more open and bigger.
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The places which will be higher will use stitches with more texture. This is the hardest part of picking stitches for needlepoint. The stitches you pick should be small enough to have three repeats of the stitch in every direction. This is enough for the eye to distinguish the pattern. Fewer repeats and the stitch can be mistaken for other stitches or the design can look confused. Even experienced stitchers get this wrong.




"Sakura" (provided by Janet to illustrate small stitches)
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There are two major exceptions to this rule. One is stripes. By their very nature stripes won't have three repeats in all directions in an individual stripe, but the whole stripe pattern should be repeated, if it isn't, pick a different stripe pattern. The second is accent stitches. There are lots of these, such as Eyelets, Rhodes or Jessicas. Accent stitches, most of which can be expended easily, should be sized so a single stitch fits in an area. Most of these stitches draw attention to themselves and having partial stitches in these looks jarring. Change the size or the stitch rather than use partial stitches for accents.
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I think another big challenge in needlepoint is adding texture to very small spaces. One easy way to do this is by picking threads with different textures, but often this does not go far enough. Then you should have a repertoire of stitches which only take up one or two threads. Some of the stitches I use again and again are Tiny Knitting (columns or rows of Continental and Reverse Continental) Needlepoint Cross Stitch (cross stitch over one intersection), and open versions of Tent Stitch. Building from that you can add high textures with French Knots or beads. Suddenly you have taken something which could look flat and given it dimension, life and subtle texture.
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For finding stitches for particular effects, I mostly rely on my own experience. I look for stitches which have a particular shape. I use stitch dictionaries for ideas. And I'm always willing to pull out an area off if it does not work. On a piece I'm working on now, I'm stitching a blackboard. I've ripped it out twice. The first time it was because I thought the thread (#12 pearl cotton) was too small. The second time, using #8 pearl cotton, I felt the stitch, Skip Tent, was too directional. I'm now stitching it in T Stitch and like the result.
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But these are guidelines. There can be great needlepoint which breaks the rules. But you should know what rules you are breaking and have a good reason to do so. If you start with this process, then when you divert from it, you will know why and where you are going.
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Keep Stitching,
Janet M. Perry

Friday, September 21, 2007

Arcadia: Dodecagon Ornament Series designed by Jim Wurth


I am very happy this morning as I have just finished stitching the 7th ornament of the Dodecagon series designed by Jim Wurth.

We will be receiving 12 ornaments total and have received 7 kits so far, so that means that for me I have finally caught up with the series. I should receive the 8th one in November, if I remember correctly.

I am now thinking of doing Halloween stuff in between regular projects. I think it is just so much fun to do. I am experimenting on something, a little gift for a dear friend of mine. Will see how it turns out, nothing big, but she will have the biggest laugh out of it, if it turns out as I would like it to. Will see.

Better go back to it as time really fly and I have so many projects to attend to.

I will be having a special guest on my blog this coming Monday September 24th. Janet Perry is making her Virtual Book Tour and will be stopping by for a visit. How nice is that?

Pierrette =^..^=

Friday, September 07, 2007

The Baroness Edie: A Jim Wurth Dodecagon Series Ornament


I ended up scanning this ornament rather than taking a digital photo as the outcome was truer to real life than what I got with the digital camera.
This was so much fun to stitch like all Jim Wurth's ornaments that I have done so far. That was the sixth one completed out of seven received so far.
I have just started working on the 7th one which is called "Arcadia", a companion piece of "Monrovia" stitched a little while back.
After that, 5 more to receive to make a total of 12 Dodecagon ornaments.
Pierrette =^..^=

The Princess and the Pea: Framed



This is my "Princess and the Pea" all framed for me to hang on my wall ........... now, which one will it be?

If you want to see the close up, just click on the photo.

Pierrette =^..^=

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Hearts & Flowers: Dodecagon Ornament Series by Jim Wurth


I had the best of time stitching this ornament called Hearts & Flowers designed by Jim Wurth. It is the 5th one of his Dodecagon Ornament Series. I just could not put it down and finished it last evening, but by then it was too dark to be able to take a proper photo so had to wait until this morning.

I love his designs so much as they are complexed and stitches are multi-layered bulding up to very nice designs, which also makes them absolutely exquisite; Also the extensive use of metallic threads makes the ornaments sparkles as you work on them. They are quite addictive , so much so that I have immediately started working on another one called "The Baroness Edie, which has a dark green canvas and comes with mauve, yellow and green threads, very relaxing colors to work with.

I have received 7 ornament kits so far and have completed 5 of them, working on number 6 and will try to get to number 7 after so that I can finally catch up with this series and then all I will have to do is stitch each additional ones as they arrive.

Better go back to the Baroness now :-D

Pierrette =^..^=

Thursday, August 23, 2007

The Princess and the Pea: Completed


Here is a photo of my completed project.
Marion tells the stitcher at the end of her book the story that goes with the Princess and the Pea. I will be quoting Marion word for word in the following little story as I don't want to miss one single little detail.
Here it goes.
"The Princess and the Pea"
"Once upon a time there was a Prince who longed to marry a real princess. He searched all over the world to find her. There seemed to be plenty of Princesses but for one reason or another, the Prince could never be sure that they were, in truth, what he sought. Disconsolate, he returned to his castle. Slowly he grew paler and thinner, pining for a real Princess.
One evening there was a terrible storm. The wind blew, lightning slashed the sky, thunder crashed and rain lashed the countryside. Suddenly a knock was heard at the castle gate. The guards hurried to the gate, holding their lanterns high above their heads.
There at the gate stood a Princess. Rain had soaked her hair and streamed in rivers from her gown to her toes. But she was a Princess ... a real Princess ... she told the guards, and had become lost in the storm.
"A real Princess?" asked the Prince, in disbelief. "We must make sure," said his mother the Queen. She prepared a bed for the Princess, made with ten mattresses filled with the solftest eiderdown. Beneath the first mattress on the boards of the bed, the Queen placed one small dried pea. The Princess, unaware of this, climbed up to sleep on top of the feather mattresses. In the morning, everyone in the court gathered to hear the Queen ask her how she slept.
"I barely slept a wink," moaned the Princess. "I am bruised all over. My bones ache as if they were broken. There must have been some frightful object in my bed."
"She is indeed a real Princess," proclaimed the Queen. "No one but a real Princess could have such tender skin!"
The delight of the Prince knew no bounds. The Kind and Queen were well pleased. The Prince married her the very next day because now he knew she was a real Princess.
And the pea can be seen on a pedestal in the Royal museum to this very day."
Isn't it a sweet story?
Pierrette =^..^=

The Princess and the Pea: Top section


Well, I sure am happy right now as I have just finished stitching Princess and the Pea. This is the top section. Will soon post a photo of the entire completed project.

Pierrette =^..^=

Monday, August 20, 2007

The princess and the Pea: 10th mattress completed


All the mattresses for our Princess are finally stitched. This will be quite a climb for her to get to the top one. Better her than me :-(

Moving on to the top part now, which is a bit different but as interesting.

Pierrette =^..^=

Sunday, August 19, 2007

The Princess and the Pea: 9th mattress stitched


Well, here I am with mattress number 9 completed. One more to go, then it will be the top of the canopy which will be in hardanger (all white), so that should be fun also.
Still thinking about stitching a little Halloween project after this project is completed. That would make a nice break between the other big project that I have started "Kaleidoscope", which requires my full attention.
I have also put my unfinished hardanger project near me so that I can also finish that. It is an EGA GCC called "Options in Hardanger" Will bring back the photo a bit later when I am close to working on it.
Better go back to my last mattress now :-)
Pierrette =^..^=