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Mary Corbet

writer and founder

 

I learned to embroider when I was a kid, when everyone was really into cross stitch (remember the '80s?). Eventually, I migrated to surface embroidery, teaching myself with whatever I could get my hands on...read more

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A Beautiful Needlework Tool Caddy (& A Give-Away!)

 

Amazon Books

Earlier this year, I showed you my absolutely favorite – and beautiful – laying tool made by Jack & John, a father-and-son team, at JR Crafter.

If you want to know what a laying tool is, you can read this article on the subject. You can also watch this video on how to use a laying tool.

The JR Crafter laying tools are my favorite needlework tools that I own. What they did was take the BLT (Best Laying Tool by Shay Pendray) and encase it in exotic wood or colorful acrylic – they’re the perfect size to hold (the BLT on its own is quite small and fiddly to hold), they’re the perfect weight, and – doggonit – they’re just pretty.

I have another JR Crafter “tool” that has been my constant stitching companion for the last six months. It’s an organizational tool. And it has solved that Where-Did-I-Put-It Dilemma. I no longer shuffle around for this tool or that while I’m in the middle of stitching.

And that, my friends, is a Wonder and a Miracle. And that’s why I’m showing you this pretty little tool caddy today – and giving one away. I also think this little beauty is a terrific gift idea, for those putting together Christmas lists.

Wood Scissor / Tool Caddy
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Stitch Fun: The Easiest Shisha Embroidery Technique Ever

 

Lately, in the Stitch Fun series, we’ve been playing with shisha embroidery. Shisha is the application of mirrors or similar shiny objects to the surface of fabric, using embroidery stitches.

So far, we’ve looked at the traditional shisha embroidery method and two variations: one shisha variation with a squared outline and a rather hairy looking decorative stitch, and the other shisha variation with an overlapping, couched fly stitch for the decorative part of the stitch.

All three of the approaches listed above are admittedly a little complex. For beginners, then, who want to add mirrors and sparkly things to their embroidered masterpieces, but would like a simpler approach to shisha, here’s an alternative that works and that is super-duper easy.

Shisha Mirror Embroidery Stitch: Easy Variation
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Tambour Work by Yusai Fukuyama – Book Review

 

Today, most of the current, in-print books that focus on work with the tambour needle are beading books. Occasionally, these books will have a chapter or a section on tambour embroidery, but for the most part, they focus on work with beads and sequins.

That’s ok! You can learn a lot about tambour embroidery from these books, too. I’m not knocking them – I’m just stating a fact. They’re mostly books on beading.

But if you want what I think is the best and most thorough book on all aspects of tambour work, primarily focusing on embroidery, you’ll have to scour libraries and out-of-print, used book sources for it.

The book is Tambour Work, by Yusai Fukuyama, published in 1987 by Dryad Press in the UK.

Tambour Work by Yusai Fukuyama
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Goldwork & Silk Tudor-style Rose – All Boxed Up

 

I spent a little time organizing my workroom (again) last week. This can be a good thing, or a bad thing. Sometimes, organizing is just an excuse for delay. Other times, it’s an absolute necessity!

In this particular case, it was the latter – and all because of a book. But I’ll save that story for next week!

While organizing, I came across a collection of stitched samples that were still set up on stretcher bar frames. One – this wee goldwork and silk rose – had been there for two years. It was definitely time to disbar it!

Goldwork & Silk Tudor-Style Rose
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Blackwork & Goldwork Kits by Jen Goodwin

 

Kits for hand embroidery are one of the best ways to learn a technique or a combination of techniques. With a kit, you have everything you need available, you don’t have to make any decisions about threads and fabrics – decisions that might stump the beginner and slow down the process of getting into embroidery. Everything’s there, ready for you to start stitching.

But for embroiderers interested in the various techniques of surface embroidery, it’s often difficult to find good embroidery kits that are instructive, challenging, and satisfying.

Rarely can hand embroidery kits be found even in local needlework shops, where counted cross stitch supplies and needlepoint offerings generally reign.

So if you want to work embroidery projects that focus on various surface embroidery techniques, you have two choices, really: design your own, or seek out one of the many designers who sell their kits directly through their own businesses. I’ve mentioned a heap of these designers on Needle ‘n Thread over the years: Phillipa Turnbull, Tanja Berlin, Trish Burr, Alison Cole, Jane Nicholas, Yvette Stanton, Jenny McWhinney – and there are many, many more embroidery designers out there who teach and who sell their own kits through their own businesses.

Today, I’d like to introduce you to Jen Goodwin’s embroidery kits. Jen’s a UK designer and instructor, and she offers many unique and beautiful embroidery kits available on her website.

Jen Goodwin Embroidery Kits
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