Willem
Friday, 05 September 2014 17:39

Nacré

Friday, 05 September 2014 17:23

King's Embroiderer

King's (Queen's) Embroiderer was an official position, from the late medieval period onwards, within the Great Wardrobe, a branch of the English monarch’s court.

Friday, 05 September 2014 17:11

Job's Tears

Job's Tears is a tall, grain-bearing plant of the family Poaceae (grass family), a native of Southeast Asia. The seeds of this plant are used as a form of applied decoration. The plant flowers from July to October with the accessor fruit (pseudocarps) ripening from September to November. It grows in the open, preferably in moist soil at a high altitude.

Friday, 05 September 2014 16:59

Jersey Occupation Tapestry

The Jersey Occupation tapestry is a commemorative embroideryillustrating the occupation and liberation of Jersey, one of the British Channel Islands, from the Nazi’s during the Second World War (1939-1945). The Channel Islands were the only part of Britain to be occupied during the war. The embroidery was made to celebrate the fiftieth university of the island’s liberation. It is also known as the Occupation tapestry.

Friday, 05 September 2014 16:51

Java Canvas Work

Java canvas work was a popular form of embroidery in the late nineteenth century, named after its ground material (Java canvas, aida). It was used for mats, music cases, work cases, and any article that requires a pliable, yet moderately stiff foundation (including slippers!). The embroidery was worked with wool, silk or filoselle silk threads.

Friday, 05 September 2014 16:46

Java Canvas

Java canvas is a nineteenth century form of canvas, in which three or four warp threads and three or four weft threads are used in blocks, with a small gap between each block.

Friday, 05 September 2014 16:39

Inlay Patchwork

This is a form of patchwork whereby a design is cut out of two pieces of cloth, which are, generally, differently coloured. Each design cut out from one piece of cloth is sewn into the hole made by the other. 

Friday, 05 September 2014 16:34

Hardwick Hall kantha quilt

The Hardwick Hall kantha quilt is an early example of Bengali (India) kantha work dating to the early seventeenth century, in the collection of Hardwick Hall (England).

Friday, 05 September 2014 16:28

Hamilton Lace

Hamilton lace is a form of net lace or a loosely worked torchon lace (a form of bobbin lace), from Scotland, popular in the late eighteenth century, and allegedly introduced to Scotland by Lady Hamilton, born Elizabeth Gunning (c. 1733-1790).

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