May 10, 2014
Hand Embroidery & The Great War
For your Saturday browsing, here’s a little bit of embroidery history relating to World War I.
I love this story!

May 10, 2014
For your Saturday browsing, here’s a little bit of embroidery history relating to World War I.
I love this story!
May 9, 2014
Today, two things: the winner of Guide to Hedebo Embroidery from last week’s give-away, and foreshadowing the next give-away, which is also a beautiful whitework book that’s become pretty rare and mighty pricey!
May 8, 2014
Earlier this spring, I added a couple gingham embroidery or chicken scratch patterns to Needle ‘n Thread.
I was working on this chicken scratch design in particular while playing around with the stuff, and the resulting square is now something useful.
I call it a Gingham Thingham.
May 7, 2014
The other day, we took a general glance at the embroidery on the flowers on the Secret Garden project, with an overview of the thread colors and embroidery stitches I’m using on the flowers.
Today, we’ll cover some stitching tips for the flowers. Even if you’re not stitching along with this project, these are the types of tips you can apply to your own embroidery projects. We’ll be looking primarily at satin stitch here, since it’s the only stitch on the flowers that might be a little challenging.
May 6, 2014
Have you even looked at a piece of vintage embroidery – say, a gorgeous whitework monogram with its satiny smooth surface and incredibly detailed adornment – and thought, “Wow. They just don’t make ’em like they used to!”
May 5, 2014
The other day, I gave you a little sneak peek at the flowers on the Secret Garden project, and today, as promised, we’ll chat about colors and stitches.
May 3, 2014
It’s only a quick glance today! Next week, I promise we’ll chat a bit more about the flowers on the Secret Garden embroidery project. We’ll look at colors and techniques, and I’ll give you some stitching tips.
But in the meantime, I just wanted to show you a splash of color on the linen, so you can get a sense of where the piece is going. Green, you see, is not the Only Color!