Schwalm Whitework


Book Description




Schwalm Embroidery


Book Description

Discover the classic beauty of Schwalm embroidery, with its surface stitches, pulled fabric, drawn thread, needlelace, and needleweaving. Featuring traditional design elements (tulips, flowers, pine cones, fruit, and doves), the projects in this unique, fully illustrated collection include table linens, a pincushion with matching needlecase, a sampler, and more. With a stitch glossary and designs suitable for beginners as well as those with experience in Schwalm.




Schwalm Embroidery Pattern Book


Book Description

With this wonderful white embroidery technique one can embroider charming country house cushions and tablecloths. But it is an embroidery for people with inner calm and many time. One embroiders on fine countable linen and must pull threads out of the fabric. So it is a beautiful challenge for experienced embroiderers. In my book I show with a lot of pictures the basic technique and more than 70 beautiful and useful filling stitches. There is a big number of filling stitches, but nevertheless, one uses the same again. And I show these popular patterns with exact instructions. Schwalm embroidery is often combined with darning hemstitches. In this book are the instructions of 10 needleweaving hems + peahole hem. The book is supplemented with some patterns of cushions. In addition, I give tips how to come from the pillow pattern to a pattern for a tablecloth and how to design himselve a Schwalm pattern. I also show 3 beautiful pillow closures for country houme pillows. And I use the filling stitches to cover buttons. This book has 104 pages full of ideas. Inside it is black / white because it is a whitework embroidery and needs no color. And the price of the book is much more positive. Now is the time to try out Schwalm embroidery, enjoy it. You got questions, come to me. Internet address and telephone number is in the book.




Portuguese Whitework


Book Description

Features needlework from Guimaraes in northern Portugal. This title helps you to learn all you need to know to create your own masterpieces and heirlooms with the step-by-step instructions. It includes a range of projects, large and small, for beginners through to advanced stitchers.




The Lost Art of the Anglo-Saxon World


Book Description

This latest title in the highly successful Ancient Textiles series is the first substantial monograph-length historiography of early medieval embroideries and their context within the British Isles. The book brings together and analyses for the first time all 43 embroideries believed to have been made in the British Isles and Ireland in the early medieval period. New research carried out on those embroideries that are accessible today, involving the collection of technical data, stitch analysis, observations of condition and wear-marks and microscopic photography supplements a survey of existing published and archival sources. The research has been used to write, for the first time, the ‘story’ of embroidery, including what we can learn of its producers, their techniques, and the material functions and metaphorical meanings of embroidery within early medieval Anglo-Saxon society. The author presents embroideries as evidence for the evolution of embroidery production in Anglo-Saxon society, from a community-based activity based on the extended family, to organized workshops in urban settings employing standardized skill levels and as evidence of changing material use: from small amounts of fibers produced locally for specific projects to large batches brought in from a distance and stored until needed. She demonstrate that embroideries were not simply used decoratively but to incorporate and enact different meanings within different parts of society: for example, the newly arrived Germanic settlers of the fifth century used embroidery to maintain links with their homelands and to create tribal ties and obligations. As such, the results inform discussion of embroidery contexts, use and deposition, and the significance of this form of material culture within society as well as an evaluation of the status of embroiderers within early medieval society. The results contribute significantly to our understanding of production systems in Anglo-Saxon England and Ireland.




Whitework Embroidery


Book Description




Embroidered Landscapes Hand Embroidery


Book Description

Design and create realistic hand-embroidered landscapes, from coastlines to deserts, escarpments to plains. Judy Wilford's stunning process combines different genres, textiles, traditional stitches, and embroidery styles. Part 1 covers the materials and equipment, lays out a simple landscape, and demonstrates background layering and surface stitching. The second section contains a range of projects, each developing and extending the various techniques.




Crewel Intentions


Book Description

Keeping to a theme started in Crewel Twists, this book continues the concept of using non-traditional techniques and materials in crewel or Jacobean embroidery. It showcases four large projects, each with an accompanying small project similar in technique, and shows needle workers how to be creative with threads, alternative stitches and beads. Traditional techniques are explained but are extended with the use of bead embroidery, needle lace techniques, and stitches not normally used in crewel work. Many new needle lace and bead embroidery techniques are incorporated, and the book also explores weaving techniques used to create textures like twill and lace weaves, as well as patterns similar to tartan and houndstooth check. Every project is clearly explained with step-by-step instructions and lots of photographs, and the completed embroideries are once again displayed in ways that are both decorative and functional in the home. Templates of the original designs complete this magnificent source for creative embroidery.




One Needle, One Thread


Book Description




Clothing the Clergy


Book Description

Maureen C. Miller traces the ways in which clerical garb changed over the Middle Ages. Miller goes into detail about craft, artistry, and textiles and contributes to our understanding of the religious, social, and political meanings of clothing, past and present.