Monday, June 27, 2022

Summer Project

I need a summer time project!  One that I can pick up, lay down when bored with it—something that fits in my hands!  I settled on embroidery that I've put off for some time now.  It's perfect to work with during these hot days, stay inside days, being lazy days.  Besides--the title of the book is 
"Snow Happy"!  Maybe, that will make me feel cooler as I work on snowmen!


Look at all those tiny snowmen!  So much fun to stitch such small delights!  I have the cloth already--it was tucked inside the book--can't believe I planned that far in advance!
I'll be using this handspun, indigo dyed silk thread--it's been in my stash forever!  It's a single yarn, just perfect for this stitching.
Every time I did natural dyeing I would skein off a small amount of handspun silk to throw in the dyepot.  Once rinsed and dried, the yarn was wound around a card--wish I'd written the dye that I used--but ME, thinking I"d remember many moons later, didn't do such a small thing as write the name of the dye plant!!  Of course, not!  that would too easy.  I can remember blue is indigo, yellow is most likely osage orange or onion skins (which to this day I still save for another dye day); deep purple and red shades are cochineal (this I know as I have about 5 pounds of those little beetles)  If it remotely looks like green--then it's an over dye of yellow in indigo.  
 
when I did natural dyes at the plantation, where I was education coordinator, I would dye these skeins for a fellow docent, who loved to stitch authentic pieces for the house (dated 1800--it is a French Colonial plantation, very simple and plain for that time period--not an antebellum)
Anyway, I would wind these little scraps of handspun for her to use in her stitching--she was thrilled!

One of the first skills I learned as a young girl was to embroider.  I only knew one stitch--don't know the name of the stitch but it's what I used for years.  Embroidery is something anyone can learn and use. 
Through the years I learned many of the other stitches that can be used to create lovely handwork.
I have a number of hand embroidered tea towels that my mother-in-law did--she learned as a young girl too--stitching on feed or flour sacks--another history lesson in the world of using throw away products.

ready to take thread and needle to cloth!!









 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Tour de Fleece Update!

Watching and pedaling with the Tour de France bikers is the delight of my day! load my wheel with necessary bobbin, gather my spun yarns, gr...