Friday, 22 June 2012

Just Plucked

I love embroidery. Obviously. I also love fabric. And appliqué is a good meeting point for the two – I get to indulge my passion for contemporary design using more than just thread. And sometimes a design works out in such a way that it “has legs”, as they say in the advertising industry. It’s perfect not only for hand stitching, but also for appliqué.

Such is the case with my latest designs, Just Plucked. Two hand-drawn blooms in vibrant reds and greens, appliquéd on to snow white cotton fabric and made up into plush 50x50cm scatter cushions. 

Just Plucked 1

Just Plucked 2

The patterns are available as digital downloads in my online appliqué shop and include the design and templates, full instructions for the appliqué and to make the cushion, as well as a comprehensive requirements list.

Sunday, 17 June 2012

Cross Stitch Collection interview

My first interview, in the June issue (no. 210) of UK needlework magazine Cross Stitch Collection:


Sunday, 10 June 2012

The Stitch and Thimble : 08

I've just uploaded the new edition of The Stitch and Thimble to my online shop, so go and check it out if you're looking for a new embroidery project. I'm sure you'll find something that appeals in this one.


If you need more eye candy than just the cover, there are photos of the individual projects on my flickr, facebook, hand embroidery network and pinterest pages (links on the right). Enjoy.

The Stitch and Thimble : 08 is available for sale now on my website.

Saturday, 2 June 2012

Stitch crazy

I've gone a bit stitch mad. It's because I keep finding all these amazing old reference books, with stitches that are only vaguely familiar or completely new to me. 


My latest acquisitions include Anchor's 100 Embroidery Stitches (okay, this one's not old), The Stitchery Book: Embroidery for Beginners by Irene Preston Miller and Winifred Lubell, Embroidery Stitches by Barbara Snook and Design and Embroidery by Valerie Cliffe and Edward Arnold. I love the old covers and layouts, and the pages and pages of stitch descriptions alongside black and white, hand-drawn illustrations.





But part of the appeal is definitely in the finding, as well as the funding. I love a good find and I love it even more at a bargain price (must be some of my throwback Scottish DNA filtering through).

I picked up the Anchor booklet at Die Wolwinkel (Afrikaans for "the wool shop"), which we found by chance while driving in the town of Klerksdorp recently, for R25 (less than £2 at the moment). I also finally got around to browsing the second-hand bookstore down the road, where the bright red cover of The Stitchery Book caught my eye from the bottom shelf of the craft section. That set me back all of R24.95. And I found Embroidery Stitches and Design and Embroidery in the bookstore of a warren of Hospice shops in Orange Grove, here in Johannesburg, which along with three vintage embroidery and crochet magazines cost me R30 (about £2.30).

At this point, I feel I have to share the fact that I also got two vintage cloths featuring the most minute appliqué, a vintage pillow cover, a delicate piece of crocheting and a handful of buttons, bias binding, braid and cotton tape for a mere R20 from the linen, fabric and haberdashery section. (Couldn’t resist a little gloat.)



But getting back to the stitches. This bombardment of stitch books and the fact that I've just finished stitching the sampler project for the next issue of The Stitch and Thimble have got me thinking a lot about samplers. I'm keen to try my hand at designing a few, using all these new/old stitches that are swirling around in my head. Traditionally, it seems you stick either with a row-by-row approach or designs made up of sections of stitches, which definitely work. But I'm after something a little more innovative, a bit different. I've put it on the brain backburner, so that's something I'll be pondering for the next while. I'm sure all these stitch books will keep things ticking over until something springs to mind.