Saturday, December 20, 2008

More Free Christmas Ornament Charts and a Needle Roll


Many designers are posting free charts on their blogs as a Christmas treat. I have several more of my favorites to show you so you can be sure to pack a a few supplies and treat yourself to some stitching as you travel or wait at home for Santa.

First, here is Judy Harper's lovely Christmas flower/four way bargello ornament. You start with a red Christmas rose and then fill out the design with bargello wave patterns. Lovely!

http://needle-crafts.blogspot.com/2008/12/four-way-bargello-ornament-or-egg.html

Laura Perin has posted links to two free Christmas quilt ornaments on her blog. They are beautiful! She is a terrific designer and these two squares show off her inventiveness with color and pattern very well.

http://two-handedstitcher.blogspot.com/2008/12/need-little-christmas.html


Finally, need a Christmas present for a stitching friend? Mary Corbet shows off a favorite and very easy to make tool from her stitching tool box--a needle roll. Very clever!

http://www.needlenthread.com/2008/12/keeping-my-embroidery-needles-all.html


Have fun making something special for the holidays. By the way, the Plum Pudding canvas above is by Joy Juarez and is on sale at eBay now for $145 with free shipping.

http://cgi.ebay.com/Plum-Pudding_W0QQitemZ190271421525QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item190271421525&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14&_trkparms=72%3A1205|66%3A2|65%3A12|39%3A1|240%3A1318|301%3A1|293%3A7|294%3A50

Jane/Chilly Hollow
Main blog at http://blog.360.yahoo.com/chillyhollow

The Geisha's Robe Is Done?


You may have noticed how I avoided talking about one part of The Geisha's robe--the medium dusty rose pink labels that overlap the chrysanthemums on plum body of the robe. If you watched the video showing kimono layering I found on the Immortal Geisha website, you'll probably agree that this area is a kimono layer showing from underneath. This was the most difficult part of the kimno for me to stitch as I had a lot of ideas that didn't seem to work well with either the plum chrysanthemum area or the box-covered shawl collar.

I finally did long straight vertical satin stitches (4 plies of Splendor S1035) for the bulk of the collar except for a tiny area at the bottom of the left side where straight stitches looked odd. I pulled them out and used diagonal stitches from the top of the flower to that area's left to the bottom of the kimono and that worked better. I may replace some of the long stitches on the right side of the kimono near the peach with diagonals, too. I haven't decided yet.

Once the long stitches were in, I wanted to emphasize the thin deep plum line that separates the various collar areas from each other. I thought a stem stitched line in my deep plum would be perfect but I wanted a perle type thread for that so I'd have a bit of "loft" -- round perles are higher than flat plies and so I wanted perle.

Enter Stage Left my very best friend when it comes to stitching supplies--Liz, the new owner of Needlewoman East. [Loud applause!]

I gave Liz the color number of my Splendor and asked her to rummage around to find a silk or cotton perle around size #8 that was the same deep plum, or something very similar. I hoped that there was a card of Elegance in the same color (Rainbow Gallery also sells three sizes of perle silks in colors that match Splendor and Elegance is #8 perle-sized) but that wasn't the case. Unfortunately, the closest color match was a cotton perle that was several shades lighter than my deep plum Splendor S1037. We talked it over and decided that a deeper color would work, but not a lighter one. So Liz wasn't able to help, although if I'd broadened my search parameters to a wool or silk/wool thread, I suspect she might have come up with something. You do have to think texture when matching colors. A silk like Splendor that's not really shiny will look enough like a cotton perle that a viewer probably won't notice they aren't the same thread but a wool and a silk will not match in texture.

Thanks anyway, Liz! I'll come see you for the big after Christmas sale....

[Liz bows, waves and blows kisses to you all, then exits to join the other shop owners in the audience. Many thanks to shop owners everywhere. What would we do without you?]

So I did what anyone would do who couldn't get a perle to match her floss--I made my own. It's pretty simple: Put 4-6 plies of your floss in your needle, secure it on the back and come up as usual at the starting point, then twist the needle (I went counterclockwise) until you have a tight little cord. Plunge the needle while keeping the tension on the thread so it doesn't untwist. I did my stem stitches carefully up the kimono collars, carefully checking to make sure the thread wasn't unwinding when I came up from the back. It took a while but now I have a little edge along the dark plum lines on the kimono. You can't see it in the photos but it is there in person and it raises the areas enough to give a bit of lift to the kimono's edges to frame The Geisha's face.

Jane/Chilly Hollow
Main blog at http://blog.360.yahoo.com/chillyhollow