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    Needlework Site of the Week: Easter Egg Patterns

    Friday, March 21, 2008, 02:55 PM [Favorite Needlework Websites]

    About.com has a thorough cross stitch section with lots of great information--and free patterns. If you're looking for a last-minute, quick-stitch Easter project, take a look at the banded Easter egg chart by Connie G. Thomas, the About.Com Guide to Cross Stitch. You can find more Easter patterns, as well as dozens of others covering additonal holidays and themes, by looking through the linked Free Cross Stitch Patterns From A-Z Index.

    --Nancy

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    Needlework Site of the Week: Celtic cross stitch

    Friday, March 14, 2008, 01:03 PM [Favorite Needlework Websites]

    Just in time for St. Patrick's Day, here's a site devoted entirely to Celtic cross stitch.

     

    Celtic Cross Stitch: Pattern & Design Resources thoroughly examines this form of embroidery, which features the Celtic knot, through articles, tutorials (including videos), free patterns, and lots of links to some intriguing sites (needework and otherwise).

    As you celebrate your Irish heritage this weekend, get in touch with your Celtic roots in the world of needlework through this interesting site.

     

    Slainte,

    Nancy

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    Needlework Site of the Week: antique sewing tools

    Friday, March 7, 2008, 11:38 PM [Favorite Needlework Websites]

    I was always generally interested in antique needlework tools, but my interest never exceeded my enthusiasm for actually doing needlework. Maybe it's just my mania for collecting things in general, but lately I've become more and more interested in old tools and notions. I haven't actually purchased anything yet, but I wander with envy through the many wonderful items on eBay, daring myself to buy something. (If you saw my apartment, you'd understand why I'm hesitant to start any more collections of anything.)

    Lately I've been mildly obsessed with chatelaines, those pins or belt clips ladies once used to hold all their necessary items hooked onto chains (like scissors, needlecases, pincushions, and more). Old and new, the fabulous silver chatelaines are prohibitively expensive, although there are excellent patterns for making chatelaines in cross stitch, hardanger, crocheting, and quilting. I did buy a bunch of cheap reproduction pieces on discount at a craft store and came up with my own version, but that's a different story (which I'll share eventually).

    What I want to share today is an article called "Antique Sewing & Needlework Tools" by Gloria Brunning. If you're interested in antique needlework tools, you'll enjoy this piece, which includes a gallery of items, many made of bone, including bodkins, lucets, and cotton barrels. If any of these terms are unfamiliar to you, take a look at Brunning's photos and commentary.

    This article is featured on www.antiquequiltdating.com, "New Pathways Into Quilt History," by quilt historian and antique quilt collector Kimberly Wulfert. Even if quilting isn't your area of needlework interest, don't overlook this site packed with material both informative and enjoyable!

    --Nancy

     

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    Needlework Site of the Week: online tutorials

    Monday, March 3, 2008, 09:11 AM [Favorite Needlework Websites]

    NOTE: We were having technical difficulties on Friday and over the weekend. I did post this on Friday, but it kept going to my personal admin blog instead of the category blog. I think the bugs have been chased out and it's working properly now.

    Mary Corbett's Needle'NThread site is subtitled "Tips, Tricks, and Great Resources for Hand Embroidery." It's all that and more! I encourage you to look all around the site, from Mary's blog to her gallery to her free patterns page. What I want to focus on today is her Video Library of Hand-Embroidery Stitches.

    I watched several of these video tutorials, and they're wonderful. Brief, clear, easy to follow, with the camera focused close on just Mary's hands, the needle and thread, and the fabric, with Mary's careful explanation accompanying her demonstration of the stitches. (I didn't try to view these with my home dial-up system, but on broadband they loaded almost instantaneously and played beautifully.)

    As an added extra-special bonus, Mary provides a how-to article, with photos, of how she creates and films her tutorials.

    She says she's always adding new tutorials, so be sure to check back at Needle'NThread often! It should definitely be bookmarked as a "must" site for all embroidery enthusiasts.

    --Nancy

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    Needlework Site of the Week: Pattern Gold Mine

    Friday, February 22, 2008, 11:37 AM [Favorite Needlework Websites]

    For today's Friday Needlework Site of the Week I offer you the Antique Pattern Library. If you haven't seen it yet, it will blow you away!

    Basically, antique needlework books are scanned and posted online--and the selections are amazing. Although the books are in the public domain, the scans are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license. This means you can download and use the patterns for free, although there are a few "conditions of use" that are of interest if you plan to make and sell work from these patterns. (It's nothing overly complicated; it's all spelled out on the home page, so take a look.)

    The patterns are in PDF format, so you'll need Acrobat; and if you have dial-up, loading the books may take awhile. But the wait is worth it.

    The site offers a thorough and helpful catalog page listing every title along with a description that includes the needlework techniques covered in the book. (As the instructions point out, you can use your "Find" function to locate a specific technique that interests you. It's also fun simply to browse.)

    Seemingly every type of embroidery is covered, plus crochet, knitting, tatting and other lacemaking techniques, and even a few references to quilting. Projects and patterns by such luminaries as Orr, Dillmont, Beeton, Priscilla Publishing, and Needlecraft present such a trove of gorgeous, intriguing designs that you literally won't know which to pick first.

    Remember these are antique designs and patterns, reflecting everything from 19th century fashion to art noveau designs and 1920s needle arts. Instructions and stitches may vary from what is commonly used today, so keep that in mind. However, many charts are adaptable to various techniques (a filet crochet chart could be used for pattern knitting, cross-stitch, or beading, for example).

    Check it out--and have a great time exploring

    --Nancy

     

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