The Accidental Embroiderer

The first three out of twelve

Last week I mentioned that I'm currently working on some large projects. One of these is a series of birds in birdcages – they're separate designs, not one big panel, but all the same they all did take a while to finish. They're more arty than realistic and I think they might go well on a project such as a cushion cover or something like that. As I said, there are 12 of them, of all different kinds of birds, and here are three of them

 

Birdcage4

 

Birdcage3

Birdcage5

Now – before anyone calls up the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals about me, I do know that these cages would really be way too small for the birds they have in them. But if I made them a realistic size, there would be way too much cage and not enough bird. So just think of these as show cages where the birds stay for a short time before going back to their nice roomy aviaries!

A couple of peacocks from the 1950’s

I'm in a quandary. I'm working on several large projects at the moment, but none of them are really at the stage where I can post them. So I've searched back in the files for something to put up, and found these designs which I did for Cherri a while ago. She wanted things that she could stitch on to bags which she was making as Christmas presents for her friends. and I've already posted some of the others

 

Cherribag2 copy

 

 

Cherribag9 copy

The 1950s back again…

In style they're sort of in-between folk art and the kind of simplified designs that were popular in the 1950's. Actually I quite like that style – maybe it's time for a 1950's revival!

And on a personal note, these designs are particularly appropriate for me just now, because our garden has been invaded by our neighbour's peacocks, who are gobbling all the food we put out for the wild birds, and pecking off the new green leaves of our garden plants. Whoever said that life in the Scottish Highlands couldn't be exotic never lived here!

Yet more Art Nouveau freebies for April

OK, the first of the month, and it's time for a couple of new freebies. Actually they aren't all that new, because in 2016 I posted two other designs from the same set. They're applique designs from the art nouveau era, and I love art nouveau, so over the years I've done a lot in that style. These are both pretty simple designs – 4×4 inches (100 x 100 mm) with just one applique step

ANfree1

The first Art Nouveau design (number 3, just to be confusing)

 

ANfree2

….and the second (Art Nouveau 4)

 

Here's the first design (Art Nouveau 3, in .pes v.6) with its worksheet and here's the second (Art Nouveau 4) with its worksheet

If you didn't pick up the first two Art Nouveau appliques in 2016, here's a link to the blog where they're posted, so you can add them to your collection. You will have to scroll down a bit to find them:https://theaccidentalembroiderer.typepad.com/the-accidental-embroiderer/2016/12/index.html

Now – I have a question! Does anyone have any ideas for freebies that I could offer? Maybe something I've already posted here, or maybe a new idea that I could do? I've asked this question of readers before and got some interesting answers, so if you have any inspirational ideas, just let me know! For various reasons it might not be possible for me to offer everything that I do, but I'd love to know what thoughts people have. Thanks!

Finishing off the Big Cats

First of all, I owe heartfelt thanks to all those people who responded to my request for ideas of how to finish off the Parliament of Birds that I posted last week. So many fantastic and original ideas! I am now seriously thinking of maybe doing more than one additional bird panel just to make use of all the possible ways to finish it. So – THANK YOU!

But now back to the Big Cats panel, and to the final two designs, which are a lion and a lioness

 

Lion

The Lion

 

Lioness

and his Lioness

And here is the final version of the panel stitched together, with a couple of small  twigs of greenery to make the shape into a regular rectangle.

 

Big Cat panel

After looking at if for some time, I'm beginning to wonder if I shouldn't have made the backgrounds brighter in some ways. But it's subtle as it is, so I'll leave it. So that's finished. On to something new!

A mystery from the past

Several years ago I had an idea for a panel with a lot of different birds. They were all to be done in a realistic style, and the whole panel was to be quite large. Well, I digitised a big collection of birds, and stitched them out together. The panel was to be called "The Parliament of the Birds" and it was almost finished. But then I got called away on another job, and totally forgot about the Parliament, which got stuffed into a box somewhere. I found it again during a recent clear-out, but the only problem was that for the life of me I can't remember what was supposed to go in the centre of the ring of birds. Some insects, maybe, for them all to eat? Some chicks? Another bird who would be the Chairman of the Parliament?

Conference

The Parliament without a middle

This is a big project, and I don't want to throw it away without making at least some effort to finish it. So does anybody have any ideas about what they're all so interested in? I would be VERY grateful for some ideas!

More Big Cats

A couple of weeks ago I posted the picture of a tiger that was going to feature on a Big Cats panel that I was making as a commission. Here are two more of the cats, a cheetah and a leopard

 

Cheetahsm

The spotty cheetah

 

Leopard

The spotty leopard

The most interesting problem that these cats presented was how to make the spots. It's not practical to make embroidered spots – there would be way too many jump stitches. So I just painted some fabric with the right kinds of spots (different for the cheetah and the leopard), used the fabric as applique, and stitched over it with a very light density of overstitching. Again, as with the tiger, there are no heavy satin stitch borders to these animals – it just wouldn't be appropriate. The overstitching does blur the underlying painted spots, but that just makes it look a little more natural. And if there are a few stray threads escaping the edges of the applique fabric, well, they are furry animals after all, so you expect a few loose hairs!!

 

A couple of early freebies

It's a bit early for a freebie – usually I post them in the first week of the month, so March's freebie isn't due until next week. But next week I have to go into hospital for a minor eye operation, so I might not be seeing too well next week and I'd better get these out now

The Pennsylvania Dutch freebie that I posted on the 15th of January proved to be very popular, so I thought maybe you'd like something in the same style to go with it. These two are a bit less free and more formal than the earlier design, but they're in the same general style so they all might go well together

 

PD2

This is the first one, and here's the .pes file

PD3
…and the second one, and here's the file for this one

 

A more modern mille-fleurs style

Last November (on the 20th) I posted a large tapestry that I'd just finished, which was based on the medieval mille-fleurs style. As I said then, I've always loved mille fleurs tapestries, and the style seems to me to be well-suited to interpretation in embroidery. So when I'd finished the first mille-fleurs tapestry I started thinking about maybe making another version of it – something similar. but more colourful, more playful

So I started putting together more birds sitting in more leaves, in a slightly different style, and came up with this

 

Coloutree entireA modern tapestry idea

By the way – I did stitch out all the squares, but haven't yet got round to stitching the whole tapestry together. So I just scanned the squares and Photoshopped them together into a big but fake construction. So this means that all those blotches and lines and gaps between the squares don't really exist – they're just Photoshop's fault

A present for a vet: The Big Cat Panel (part 1)

In the past couple of weeks I've mentioned that I'm working on a couple of commissions – one of these is for a woman whose son is a wildlife vet, and who wanted something appropriate to give him. After some enquiry I found that he particularly liked big animals, like lions and elephants

Now, I am second to none in my admiration of elephants, but from a design point of view they're a bit limited. You just draw a big elephant and that's about all you can do with them. But the big cats make up a very interesting group consisting of many beautiful and intriguing animals so I decided to try my hand at a Big Cat Panel. It's almost finished at the moment, and features a lion, a lioness, a cheetah, a leopard and of course the most spectacular of all, the tiger

 

Tiger

The Leaping Tiger

Technically it wasn't difficult – just an appliqueed body lightly overstitched with the appropriate colours and then the stripes stitched on top. There's no satin stitch border to the applique, of course – after all, this is a real tiger and not a cartoon! He's a nice big size – ten inches from nose to tail tip – so he will make a good "header" for the panel. I'll post the other Cats in the next few weeks

 

 

A couple of blue freebies

 Well, I'm still working on those commissions so I've raided the old files for a freebie for February, and came up with a couple which might do. They date from the dim-and-distant past, at a time when I was experimenting with designs from different cultures. These little blue designs were inspired by old Chinese plates which explain their round shapes. They're really very simple designs, but none the worse for that, and they're both for the 4×4 inch (100 mm x 100 mm) hoop

 

Bluetree

The Blue Tree

 

Bluebowl

The Blue Bowl

 

Here is the file for the Tree (in .pes v.6), here is the Bowl, and here is the worksheet for them both

I hope you are all well – here in the Grampian Highlands we are shortly expecting another 3 feet of snow to be dumped on top of the 4 feet that we already have, so we wouldn't be going anywhere even if Covid wasn't still lurking in the shadows…