Embroidery
Designs
A crafty person who does embroidery habitually collects embroidery
designs the way a bibliophile amasses books. She is working
one pattern, is excitedly preparing the threads and for two or three
other embroidery designs she has bought and has slated as gifts, and is
champing at the bit to get to the needle crafts store to look at and
buy more new design patterns. Yes, it is an addiction of
sorts, but it is a lovely craft to be addicted to.
I bet my brief description of the needlepoint fiend rang true for you,
didn’t it? I know what I am talking about, as I am
that fiend. I am a needlepoint addict. I
can’t wait till the too-long workday is done so I can prop
self in bed, lay out whatever design I am working, and eat, smoke,
watch cable movies, and do my thing. I love the colors (and
color choices); I love the prospect of blank canvases; and I love
searching for, looking at, planning for, and stockpiling new
needlepoint and embroidery designs, patterns, design and pattern books,
supplies, and kits.
But rather than ramble and gush, which is all but useless to you, let
me give some specific examples and descriptions of embroidery designs I
have worked and want to work, maybe giving you ideas in the process:
EMBROIDERY DESIGNS as KITS
There are two kinds of embroidery designs in kits that I work
with. First, there are the straight up canvases, work charts,
and accompanying threads. My favorites have been all the ones
I have sent or given as gifts to be framed: I did Kooler Design Studio
orchids for one friend who is into greenhouses and growing orchids; I
have done Bucilla embroidery designs/kits in pillow cases with hearts,
the “Celestial Picture/Pillow”, and wedding date
announcements. And when my mom—who is a huge needle
craftsperson herself—learned I was into embroidery and
needlepoint, she sent me a ton of Janlynn embroidery designs and kits
that she had started and wanted me to finish. (She is like
us, huh? Finding the fun is in the novelty of the
projects.) I finished “Night Dancers,”
modern art tulips; and am working on “Cottage and
Gazebo” and “After Church.” I
have yet to tackle the gigantic Dimensions “Elegant
Cats,” as well.
Then there are the embroidery designs that come with sized canvas
pieces, a little chart or legend, and a useful item that the finished
embroidery will slide into. For example, I found clear
plastic coasters that unsnap so you can needle pieces, slide them each
in each of the coasters, and give as gifts. I made four
simple monogram coasters with my friends’ wedding flowers on
them for their anniversary one year. You can do mugs,
bookmarks, towels, bibs, and other partially pre-made items like this.
EMBROIDERY DESIGNS from SCRATCH
If you get really crazy for new patterns, or have run out of in-store
options, or whatever, you can do your own embroidery designs.
I have done everything from band logos on satin jackets (hey, it was
the seventies) to bathrobes with giant butterfly designs. I
just recently did a pattern from scratch by using my
computer…not in the way you might think…not by
printing out one of the many lovely free embroidery designs but by
doing this: my friend was about to graduate from
paramedics’ school and she also loves hats. Her
brother had bought her the only hat he could find at Christmas in the
style she wears, but he was sad that there was no cool logo.
So I found a picture of the paramedics patch online, expanded my
viewing screen (by hitting CTRL and + at the same time), and taped a
piece of blank embroidery canvas to the screen and traced the
patch. I then did the needlepoint using the colors of the
paramedics in her area.
EMBROIDERY DESIGNS as PATTERNS
I won’t bore you (or tease you) with a complete list of the
many embroidery designs I have done by buying just the book or pamphlet
pattern and going it alone on blank canvas, but I would like to mention
a couple of leading artists in the embroidery design field.
My first really huge project was for my sister--the goddess Circe, a
design for which I found in what I think is the best magazine of
embroidery designs out there: Jill Oxton’s Cross Stitch and
Beading. I have also used her magazine for a series of wild
animal pieces, which I sent to my brother.
I am right now doing a Mirabilia Designs pattern. It came in
its own classy envelope, with nothing but the chart and a photograph of
the finished image—two Elizabethan lovers on a terrace with
flowers, in a design titled “The Kiss.”
It is a housewarming/going-away gift for my doctor and his wife, who
was my colleague at a local college here in town.
I have just purchased (online at EBay!) a small collection of Janet
Powers Originals, “The Winslow Homer Collection,”
which I will do for my friends who are going with a palm tree motif n
their living room. Then I want to do….well, you
get the idea. Of course you do: you are just as mad for
stockpiling new embroidery designs as I. If we only had time
to DO them all!
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