About

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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Welcome to Summer! What’s Your Summer Project?

 

Amazon Books

Well, here at the studio in Kansas, summer has officially begun – with a crazy-cold and rainy weekend. I even had the heat on yesterday!

Not summer-summer, mind you, as in the season, which commences on the summer solstice some time around the third week of June. I mean the summer that (since my childhood, anyway) always seemed to kick off with Memorial Day weekend. That’s when school was officially out back in the day. I know it doesn’t happen that way anymore – school terms often extend well into June now – but when I was growing up so many eons ago, that blissful no-school season of summer was sandwiched with anticipated regularity between Memorial Day and Labor Day.

Between those two holiday weekends, we enjoyed glorious days of kid-freedom. Blueberry picking in the woods is what I remember in summer. Strawberry picking in fields. Walking to the library, stopping at a small gas station called Richardson’s on MA-111 in Massachusetts, to buy penny candy on the way home, driving poor Mr. and Mrs. Richardson nuts while we labored over the grave selection of a dime’s worth (or a quarter, if we were rich!) of candy. (Sixlets, anyone?)

Life is not quite as simple now. Now, I have to figure out how things are going to progress against a series of deadline during these summer months, so that we accomplish everything we need to accomplish at Needle ‘n Thread.

But at the same time, I think it is important to have some R & R at some point during summer, and to go along with that, I usually have a project in mind.

Tea Pot & Cups ready to stitch towels
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Oh, These Deadlines! Applique Lettering Progress

 

Oh, golly! I love deadlines.

Here in the studio, we’ve been working on the appliqué lettering project that we talked about here.

I really want to thank the Collective Mind of Needle ‘n Thread – that’s all of you – for your input and advice on the appliqué process for these letters.

We’re applying letters to an altar cover (which is exactly what it sounds like – a cloth that covers the top of an altar in a church, in order to keep the linens on the altar clean.)

Remember this one, that was worked entirely in goldwork and silk, a few years back? We’re making another one, but not nearly as complex, and certainly without the mega-hours that we put into that one.

Our deadline on this one is next Thursday, May 29th. Uuuuuuh…. hmmm.

That’s less than a week, and although it’s not nearly as labor intensive as the first lettered altar cover we did, it is not not labor intensive. Hand stitching takes time, no matter how you slice it.

Cloth of Gold letters appliquéd on altar cover
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Needlework Stand Pouch: Just a Little Side Project

 

Whew! It was a wild and wooly weekend out here in Kansas, thanks to some sweeping storm fronts and the anticipation and anxiety they bring with them. It’s not that I don’t like a good thunderstorm, but destructive weather is always worrisome in case it hits, and heart-wrenching when it does hit.

All is calm now, though, so this morning, it was time to “un-batten-down” the hatches, put everything back to rights, and get on with the week.

In the midst of other Studio Stuff – you can see my article here on the recent projects going on at the studio – I had the itch to get this little project that’s been hovering in my mind, over with.

Potoky Modern Needlework stand pouch
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My Repurposed Needlework Tool Tin

 

Would it be really weird to say that certain needlework accessories make me happy?

I’m a huge fan of functional, attractive, good quality accessories that help keep my work or my tools organized, that are easily transportable, that are kind of fun and out of the ordinary.

I tend to repurpose a lot of things that aren’t meant necessarily for Needlework, too. I’ve found that expandable canvas pen & pencil cases make great travel cases for whole (small) embroidery projects, for example, or for all the bits and bobs that I tote about when I’m working on my languishing hexie quilt.

Decorative tins make great storage for thread sets, they work well to keep projects contained, and I use them for art supplies, too.

Egg cups make a fabulous base for a pin cushion. Cute magnets meant for the fridge work great as needle minders. Unusual and pretty glass jars make interesting receptacles for orts (leftover thread bits). A decorative coat hook or picture hook serves as a hanger for a displayable ornament.

And on, and on…

I know I’m not the only one out there who does this! I’m sure many of us in the needlework world repurpose neat things for various purposes, and find pleasure in doing so!

Eyeglass Tins for Needlework Tools
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Stitch Life: Outdoor Stitching – Tips & Precautions

 

Up here in much of the Northern Hemisphere, spring is well and truly underway, and, in some places, summer is even creeping up on us and taking over.

This means outdoor weather! Vacation! Travel! Beach life (well, not really out here in Kansas)! Sunshine, outdoors, relaxation – you know the daydream!

Even if a vacation is not on your calendar, you might enjoy relaxing outdoors at your own little castle. I have a patio in my backyard, for example, that’s perfect for outdoor relaxation and reverie in the spring, and even mildly tolerable on summer mornings. Occasionally, it’s a great place to stitch.

Stitching outside can be a lovely change. It lends to a sense of vacation, even in your own backyard. There’s something eminently relaxing about birdsong, soft breezes, even the distant noise of Life going on – lawnmowers, kids playing down the street, the barking of a dog or the laughter of neighbors. The sound of the world waking up in the morning, or the rustle of unknown wildlife moving through the woods behind you. And the smells – fresh grass, heady flowers, that honeysuckle hedge in full bloom and the occasional waft from the lilacs. Ahhhhhhh, me. So lovely!

Stitching Outdoors - Tips & Precautions
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