Monday, October 12, 2009

Canvas of the Day: Hula Cat








Today's canvas of the day is a Hawaiian cat from Patt and Lee Designs dancing the hula. This tickles me since none of the cats I'm familiar with would be caught dead in that getup. And they do NOT dance. LOL
http://www.busyneedle.com/Whatsnew/newnc2009Oct.htm

This canvas is 14 count but I think you can also buy it on 16 or 18 count canvas via the designer's website.
http://www.pattandleedesigns.com/cat_inspired_designs

This canvas comes with a stitch guide but that's not going to stop me from coming up with more ideas for her!  The first thing I'd do (after making a color copy of the unstitched canvas which I will use to place stitches on areas stitched over and then will destroy) is pick nice fuzzy black, white and gray threads for the fur and stitch the entire cat except for the pink inner ears, the eyes, the nose and the pink open mouth in tent stitches.  This includes the gray lines dividing areas of the body.  Once you are done, take a brush of some sort and brush-brush-brush the stitches to give the cat fur.  You'll want to do the fur first and then brush it before doing anything else as you wouldn't want to accidentally brush the eyes or other non-fuzzy parts.

Now go back and stitch the inner ears in silk perle (Trebizond, perhaps?), the green and black eyes in something with a bit of shine (maybe Flair? with a white stitch for the accent in a metallic thread), and the pink nose and inner mouth in pinks using something like Very Velvet that will give a velvety look.  All are in tent stitch, you understand.

Now using your white fur thread, stem stitch the whiskers on top of the black face fur.  Use your color copy to see exactly where to put them.

Now it is time to stitch the bra.  I think the bra is the perfect place for Burden Stitch.  Choose a green thread for the main vetical stitches and either a matching or contrasting metallic for the horizontal threads.  Feel free to change the color of the bra from green if you like as Burden Stitch will completely cover the canvas.
http://www.needlepoint.org/StitchOfTheMonth/2004/jan.php

I suggest you consider Thread Gatherer's Sea Grass for the cat's grass skirt.  This thread looks like dried reeds for baskets.  I think it would look great here.  Mix several shades of greens and browns in stem stitch for the grass skirt.  The bottom rows could be attached on the back and come up and go back down in a big loop that could be secured on the back and then cut to give the skirt loose ends at the bottom.  Don't worry about matching the threads to the painted colors exactly.  They'll cover the background and it won't matter if you put brown where green is painted.
http://www.threadgatherer.com/sea%20grass%20page.htm

I think I'd run wild with silk ribbon embroidery flowers for her lei and do a large ribbon flower over her ear, but you could just do the silk ribbon flower for her hair and try turkeywork for the lei.  If turkeywork appeals to you, work it after all the other parts of the canvas are stitched and trim it slowly with your sharpest scissors.  It'll make a mess but you can cover the non-turkeywork parts of the design with paper to keep the mess from landing on them.  Here's an easy version of turkeywork from Kathy Fenchel.
http://www.needlepoint.org/StitchOfTheMonth/2006/aug.php

Choose colors that coordinate with your bra and the flower behind one ear for the lei whether you are doing silk ribbon embroidery or turkeywork.  There are a lot of styles of flowers you can do with silk ribbon embroidery but I would try to do small orchids I think since this is Hawaii and the leis there are often made of small, fragrant orchids.

Now the background.  I would find a stitch that looks like a flower and do a wavy line in the background that runs roughly from the upper right toward the lower left so that the cat appears to have flowers following her swaying.  Do the flowers in a thread matching the background color.  Here is Brenda Hart's Medallions stitch.  Don't do this in rows, just scatter a few of the floral motifs in the background.
http://www.needlepoint.org/StitchOfTheMonth/2007/sep.php

If leaving the rest of the background blank bothers you, consider using David McCaskill's water stitch.  If you use a metallic as one of the threads and work this stitch up to 2-3 threads of the background flower motifs, it will seem like blue ocean, which is something all of us would like to dance in front of on a summer's day.
http://www.needlepoint.org/StitchOfTheMonth/2003/mar.php

This is a charming canvas and something that will put a lot of summer smiles into your fall and winter stitching.

Written by Jane/Chilly Hollow
Blogging at http://chillyhollownp.blogspot.com
Archived Yahoo 360 postings at http://profiles.yahoo.com/chillyhollow

BREAKING NEWS: Society of Soie Surfine





And in the spirit of my last post, here is the announcement for the Society of Soie Surfine, which is a group of shops selling hand dyed Gloriana very fine silk perle thread and linens for extra small over one designs.  I know a lot of us are enthralled with counted thread and sampler designs.  Hopefully some of you will be interested.

The Society has a blog, also, which is full of lovely photos of the threads they are dyeing.

As a lover of fine count NP canvas and silk gauze, not to mention silk threads, I wish the Society great success!

Written by Jane/Chilly Hollow
Blogging at http://chillyhollownp.blogspot.com
Archived Yahoo 360 postings at http://profiles.yahoo.com/chillyhollow

Needlepointers' World



I've been thinking recently about Blog's visitors and the huge variety of personalities and styles there are in the world of needlepointers.  You all know me--I am into painted canvases and like realistic designs, wonderful shading, and designs with Asian themes.  I am a threadaholic, and there's nothing I like better than using a huge variety of thread brands on my embellished painted canvases in as many stitches as I can dream up.

Folks like me are a small subset of Needlepointers' World, though.

I expect the vast majority of us like to do projects in all tent stitches and only occasionally use a thread other than wool.  Some of us have been stitching since we were children; some of us started yesterday.  A great many of us love charts and counted thread.  Some of us are into miniature stitching and over one on linen.  Some of us adore silk gauze, some of us stitch only rugs.  Some of us refuse to use stretcher bars and some of us hate roller bars.  Some of us only stitch in hand, some of us only stitch on painted canvases.  Some of us have one designer whose canvases or booklets we obsessively collect and stitch.  Some of us will stitch anything, at least once.  Some of us are stitching for posterity or at least our grandkids.  Some of us never think of the future.  Some of us buy old NP pieces at yard sales and refurbish them into fantastic pillows and upholstered chairs and footstools.  Some of us only want the most modern looking designs, some of us prefer the Victorian Berlin wool work look to our stitching.  Some of us love the English kits and pillows, some of us want only framed NP or pieces we can wear.

When you visit Blog, you get me and my own personal style.  But don't think I don't realize there is a whole world of needlepointers Out There who are different than me.  I know you are there and I try to take your tastes and styles into consideration and try to mention things I know are more to your taste than mine.  After all, we all use needles and thread and NP canvas to stitch our dreams.

Our dreams vary, that's all.

Written by Jane/Chilly Hollow
Blogging at http://chillyhollownp.blogspot.com
Archived Yahoo 360 postings at http://profiles.yahoo.com/chillyhollow