Embroidery and Tapestry Weaving. Grace Christie

Embroidery and Tapestry Weaving - Grace Christie


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       Grace Christie

      Embroidery and Tapestry Weaving

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664185112

       PART I—EMBROIDERY

       CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION

       CHAPTER II TOOLS, APPLIANCES, AND MATERIALS

       CHAPTER III PATTERN DESIGNING

       CHAPTER IV STITCHES

       CHAPTER V STITCHES—(continued)

       CHAPTER VI STITCHES—(continued)

       CHAPTER VII CANVAS WORK AND STITCHES

       CHAPTER VIII METHODS OF WORK

       CHAPTER IX METHODS OF WORK—(continued)

       CHAPTER X METHODS OF WORK—(continued)

       CHAPTER XI EMBROIDERY WITH GOLD AND SILVER THREADS

       CHAPTER XII LETTERING, HERALDRY, AND EMBLEMS

       CHAPTER XIII THE GARNITURE OF WORK

       CHAPTER XIV PRACTICAL DIRECTIONS

       PART II TAPESTRY WEAVING

       CHAPTER XV INTRODUCTION

       CHAPTER XVI NECESSARY APPLIANCES AND MATERIALS

       CHAPTER XVII PREPARATIONS FOR WORK

       CHAPTER XVIII THE TECHNIQUE OF WEAVING

       NOTES ON THE COLLOTYPE PLATES

       THE COLLOTYPE PLATES

       INDEX

       EMBROIDERY MATERIALS

       J. MAYGROVE & CO. Ltd .

       PLASTER CASTS

       ROBERT S. RONALD

       THE ARTISTIC CRAFTS SERIES

       Table of Contents

       INTRODUCTION

       Table of Contents

      In the practice of embroidery the needlewoman has an advantage not now shared by workers in any other craft, in that the technical processes are almost a matter of inherited skill. Every woman can sew, and it is with little more than the needle and thread, which she habitually employs, that the greatest masterpieces of the art have been stitched. The art of embroidery, however, is not merely an affair of stitches; they are but the means by which ideas can be expressed in intelligible form, and memories of all kinds of things be pictured on stuffs.

      To laboriously train the hand is scarcely worth while unless it is capable of expressing something that is at least pretty. Nowadays much embroidery is done with the evident intent of putting into it the minimum expenditure of both thought and labour, and such work furnishes but a poor ideal to fire the enthusiasm of the novice; happily, there still exist many fine examples showing what splendid results may be achieved; without some knowledge of this work we cannot obtain a just idea of the possibilities of the art.

      It is obvious that much advantage can be gained from studying the accumulated experience of the past in addition to that current in our own day. To do this intelligently, the history of embroidery must be followed in order that the periods richest in the various kinds of work may be ascertained. Museums afford useful hunting-grounds for the study of past work; other sources are private collections, churches, costume in pictures or on engraved brasses, and manuscript inventories such as those of cathedral treasuries, which sometimes contain interesting detailed descriptions of their embroidered vestments and hangings.

      Blind copying of old work is not of much value; it is not possible or desirable to imitate XIIIth century work now, but much can be learned by examining fine examples in an appreciative and analytical spirit. In what way the design has been built up can be discovered; the most complicated result may often be resolved into quite elementary lines. The student must find out wherein lie the attraction and interest, note good schemes of colour, and learn about stitches and methods of work by close examination of the embroidery, both front and back.

      Every one knows what embroidery is, and a formal definition seems unnecessary. As a matter of fact, it would be a difficult task to give one, since weaving, lace-making, and embroidery are but subtle variations of the same art.

      This art may be of the highest or the most homely character, and the latter is by no means to be despised. Simple unaffected work decorating the things of every-day use can give a great deal of pleasure in its way. This should surely be the accomplishment of every woman, for though she may not have the skill to attain to the highest branches, it would at least enable her to decorate her home with such things as the counterpanes, curtains, and other objects that set such a personal stamp upon the English domestic work of several centuries, and which nowadays can hardly be found except stored up in museums.

      It is advisable as a general rule that the design be


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