New directions

It's been quite a while since I communicated with all of you. The Covid 19 pandemic has meant that, although I am keeping busy stitching, I didn't feel up to communicating. The longer the uncertainty goes on, the more accustomed I am becoming to the uncertainty. Human beings are adaptable and I'm experiencing that right now. My mood has brightened noticeably in the last week and, even though I'm still not going out, I feel less overwhelmed and lethargic.So, what's been going on in my studio? So many different things! I'll give you a brief overview today and then follow up with more details in upcoming posts.Firstly, I decided (just before the pandemic started) to enroll in the National Academy of Needlearts Teacher Certification Program. Sadly, the NAN Assembly that was to be held earlier this spring was cancelled because of Covid 19, so I didn't get to meet everyone face to face. However, we did meet online in a Zoom call (one of the first of many!) so I could get started. So far I love what I'm doing and the course looks wonderful! Even though I'm an experienced teacher, I haven't had specific needlework teacher training and this program is going to refine and hone my skills. My counselor is the fantastic Marsha Papay Gomola, who also inspired me to take the course after being in one of her amazing classes at the EGA National in St Louis last year.My first project is for a short, 3 hour class which is a little needlebook using crewel wool and linen. Below is a picture of the piece in progress. A piece I'd been working on months ago has been finished and is ready to be made into a large pin cushion. Two things about this project have been difficult: taking photos of it that are clear and deciding what to use to fill the pin cushion. The red silk seems to be especially difficult to photograph and all of the photos are less clear than I usually will accept. It's almost like the red silk glows and messes up the light!As for filling the pin cushion, naturally I considered using some kind of fill similar to what one would use in a pillow. I'll be making an inner cotton pin cushion which will go inside the red silk embroidered outer cover. I want there to be some weight to the cushion. I have considered hulls or flax seeds mixed with lavender. Any suggestions would be welcomed! I want whatever it is to be affordable. (I'll be offering this class somewhere, sometime in the future ...)During the beginning of our shelter in place order, I worked for a long time on this wonderful sampler by Amy Mitten. I find that the concentration required to stitch counted work is the perfect way to distract my mind from everything I would prefer not to think about just now! I love this design, based on Dutch samplers. It's called Tour van Holland and was my first foray into samplers.A new direction I've taken is to chart samplers that I own. This all came about because a friend in my EGA group wants to stitch one of my samplers in particular. I asked the wonderful Nicola Parkman of Hands Across the Sea Samplers for a charting program recommendation and decided on Macstitch. It didn't take long to learn how to use it and I find charting samplers completely absorbing!Here's the sampler my friend wants to stitch. It was worked by a little girl named Mary Parsons from Dewsbury, Yorkshire, UK. I love the verse! I've done loads of research on her and discovered why she's included both a ship and a maze in her sampler.Here's what the charted sampler looks like on my computer screen. It's such fun to examine the stitches and see what little Mary did here or there!Naturally the colors on the sampler have faded, so owning the sampler, and being able to peek at the back, is very helpful when choosing a color palette! Here you see the threads in 100.3 silks but I'll also be listing d'Alger and DMC threads in the chart. Now I just need to stitch up the model!And lastly, for those of you who hung in there until the end, the news I'm most excited to share with you all is that I've been invited to teach at the EGA National Seminar in Chicago in 2021! I'm teaching three different classes and was honored and thrilled to be chosen to be one of this amazing faculty!

Until next time, please stay safe and well!

Previous
Previous

Mary Parsons 1780

Next
Next

Catkin Crown Textile Studio is open!