Willem
Saturday, 30 August 2014 19:09

Buratto Embroidery

Buratto embroidery is named after buratto cloth, which in its turn is named after buratto, an Italian word for a sieve or sifter. Buratto embroidery is worked on an open, even-weave cloth (buratto cloth) with a single warp and a double weft. The ground has a square mesh (see lacis). Designs are worked in running stitch and may be counted or drawn directly onto the net. Buratto embroidery can be classed as an embroidered lace.

Saturday, 30 August 2014 19:05

Buratto Cloth

Buratto cloth is named after buratto, which is an Italian word for a sieve or sifter.

Saturday, 30 August 2014 18:50

Broderers´ Company

Officially known as the Worshipful Company of Broderers, the Broderers' Company is one of the Livery Companies of the City of London. The Company is also known as the Brotherhood of the Holy Ghost of the City of London. The term broderers refers to male workers in embroidery.

Saturday, 30 August 2014 18:32

Bristol Berkeley Plantation Tapestry

In 2014 it was announced that a new commemorative embroidery had been designed by the Westcountry (UK) artist, Tom Mor (who also designed the Plymouth tapestry and the New World tapestry). The Bristol Berkeley Plantation tapestry is a single panel with various scenes that illustrate the establishment of the Berkeley Hundred Plantation in Virginia, USA.

Saturday, 30 August 2014 18:25

Breton Work

Breton work is a form of embroidery that was popular in the 1870's and 1880's in Northern Europe and North America. Breton work uses a machine-made net. It is thus sometimes classed as a form of embroidered net lace. Its name is derived from traditional Breton embroidery (France), which was often used on both men and women’s regional dress.

Saturday, 30 August 2014 18:17

Brazilian Dimensional Embroidery

Brazilian dimensional embroidery is a textured surface embroidery. It uses rayon, Z-twisted threads of different weights and amounts of metal twists, as well as a variety of colours, to construct three-dimensional designs that are sewn onto a piece of cloth. Details are embroidered directly onto the cloth.

Saturday, 30 August 2014 18:12

Bradford Table Carpet

The Bradford Table Carpet is a special canvas embroidery from the early seventeenth century (c. 1600-1615). Although it is called a carpet, it is a table covering. A 'table carpet’, such as this example, was removed or covered with a linen cloth when the table was in use. The Bradford example was originally owned by the Earls of Bradford at Castle Bromwich Hall (West Midlands, England).

Saturday, 30 August 2014 18:09

Bracteate

A bracteate is a thin, metal (especially gold) disc or shaped form, which is sewn onto a textile or item of clothing. A bracteate is normally small, only a few centimetres in diameter. A bracteate can be very simple, or highly embellished with other materials, sich as beads, gems, or (enamelled) glass.

Saturday, 30 August 2014 18:04

Biscornu

Biscornu (biscournu) is the name for a small, eight-sided pin cushion that became popular in the first decade of the twenty-first century. The word biscornu is derived from the French adjective biscornu, meaning irregular, skewed or strange.

Saturday, 30 August 2014 17:53

Bincarette

Bincarette is an obsolete English trade name used by William Briggs and Company, Manchester, England, for aida or Binca cloth.

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