Pages
- Home
- New in 2024
- Needlepoint Finishers
- Interviews
- Podcasts and Videos about Needlepoint
- Tutorials and Tips
- Monthly Clubs
- Needle Felting on Needlepoint Canvas UPDATED
- Beading on Needlepoint Canvas
- Blog-Stitching Links
- Teach Yourself Needlepoint & Embellishment
- Needle Painting with Thread on Needlepoint Canvas Tutorial
- Recommended Online Shops
- Counted Canvaswork Designers
- Counted Canvaswork Shops
- Where to Donate Unwanted Stash
- Where to Sell Unwanted Stash
- Where to Have Designs Put on Needlepoint Canvas
- How To Paint Your Own Needlepoint Canvas
- Learn How To Finish Needlepoint And Assemble Self-Finishing Items
- Turkeywork Tutorials
- Copyright, Trademark and Needlepoint
- Stitching Services
- Thread Colors for Faces and Skin
- Creating Needlepoint Plaids
- How to Clean or Restore Needlepoint
- Lefties Learn Basketweave
- Appraisers for Needlepoint
- Stitching with Ribbon on Needlepoint Canvas
- Trapunto, Repousse and Padding Explained
- Tips on Creating Bullions
- Cover A Canvas Entirely In Squares
- Monogram and Alphabet Sources
Saturday, January 24, 2009
The Needle Blended Robe
Recently Anne Stradal (ASB Designs) showed various ways of handling skies behind her lighthouse canvases on her blog.
http://thecapestitcher.blogspot.com/2009/01/needle-blending-sky.html
She was stitching her newest lighthouse and decided to needle blend the sky above.
http://thecapestitcher.blogspot.com/2009/01/painting-florida-sky.html
I was finishing up the bottom of the Baroque Fish's gown and looking at colors for the rest of this pet guardian angel. I have choosen a lovely pale green for the inset in her sleeve and the front of the lower hem and thought it might be lovely to use a green similar to the Caribbean blue I have used already. It struck me it might be nice to needle blend the colors so that the top half of the skirt slowly turned from blue to green. Then I could use the green for her blouse and sleeve and go back to the blue for the collar and cuffs. Mermaids are often a blend of blues and greens and I think of the Baroque Fish as a mermaid in disquise.
You can needle blend colors easily with flosses and I am using 4 plies of Splendor already, so I found a pretty green (Splendor S880) in the same brand of silk and started above the floral band with 3 plies of the green and one of blue. In traditional needle blending you have 4-6 plies and work with all the plies in color one, then add one ply of color two, and work the area adding a ply of one color and substracting a ply of the other until you move from solid color one to solid color two. I'm skipping some steps here as I don't have a great deal of space and each row is pretty broad. What you see in the photo above is 2 plies of blue with 2 of green. For the middle third of the upper skirt I will switch to three green plies and one blue ply, then the top near the waist will be all green. It is not going to be as subtle or natural as Anne's lighthouse sky, but what is subtle or natural about a fish in a long gown?
Jane, smiling and having fun in CH
Jane/Chilly Hollow
Main blog at http://blog.360.yahoo.com/chillyhollow
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment