AP Needle Arts is having an Alexa trunk show. The in stock and trunk show designs they have are 20% off and if you buy all the threads at the same time, they are 20% off, too. If you have considered stitching a stocking this year, this is a trunk show worth browsing. (I think the stockings without a sale price are sold out, though, so hurry.)
Written by Jane/Chilly Hollow Blogging at http://chillyhollownp.blogspot.com and at http://chstitchguides.blogspot.com
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Monday, April 18, 2011
Needlepoint Purse Considerations
Needlepoint of Back Bay's Cape Cod Dogs |
The Padded Satin Stitch Outer Border Being created |
Long Stitches Under Window Right Side |
Dog's Ear and Long Metallic Stitches on Bottles |
I have been very careful with this purse. When I go somewhere in the car, it sits on the passenger seat with the NP facing out. I often hold it by the handle instead of putting it over my shoulder where an arm might rub the canvas. I don't put it on the floor anywhere, but put it in my lap or on a chair when I am at a doctor's office or a restaurant. But you do forget occasionally, and that's when a snag happens.
The Cape Cod Dogs purse has taught me that I don't have to be as careful about the types of threads I use for a purse canvas as much as I need to avoid long stitches, especially near the perimeter of a piece. Long stitches (like the satin stitch border or the long window paneling stitches) snag more than long stitches that are more towards the center of the piece (the metallic bottle stitches). Beads scattered in the center of a canvas (the mermaid tails) hold up ok as long as they are secured with doubled and waxed thread. Heavy trims with sharp edges are not a good idea. Of course I'm not thinking about carrying this purse for years. If I were, I think I would avoid all beads, stitches that cover more than 2 threads, and any thread because wool or silk, just because these have held up for centuries in museums. With these things in mind, I am ready to start my first purse canvas.
Anyone curious about "Cape Cod Dogs" can use the search function in the upper left hand corner box to read about how it was stitched.
Written by Jane/Chilly Hollow Blogging at http://chillyhollownp.blogspot.com and at http://chstitchguides.blogspot.com
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