Sam cloth is an American term for a needlework sampler, and more specifically a beginner’s practice piece in sewing letters of the alphabet.
Sailor's woolworks is a general term for decorative needlework pictures that in most cases show a specific ship or a generalised (sailing) ship. They have the nickname 'woolies'. Some of the sailor's woolworks are embroidered, others are made from appliqué cloth. Seamen produced such pictures from about the 1830's until the First World War (1914-1918).
Louis Ruffini (c. 1760-1804; also written Luigi Ruffini or Luigi Ruffin) was an Italian entrepreneur who with his family settled in Edinburgh in 1782.
Rice embroidery is a type of whitework, which extensively uses rice stitch or point de riz. This is a free-style stitch that resembles individual grains of rice. It was popular in late nineteenth century Western Europe and North America.
The Rhodesian tapestry is a series of embroidered panels that depict various elements of Rhodesian (Zimbabwean) history. The original plans for the tapestry date back to 1946, when Lady Kate Tait, wife of the then (ex-) Governor of Southern Rhodesia, Sir Campbell Tait, suggested that an embroidery should be made that depicted the “cardinal events in Rhodesian history on the lines of the Bayeux Tapestry” (Ransford 1971:4).
Rhodes embroidery is the name for a form of pulled thread work that was popular in northwestern Europe in the early twentieth century. Rhodes embroidery, which is often classed as a form of embroidered lace, was apparently based on traditional drawn thread work from the Greek island of Rhodes.
Reverse appliqué is a needlework technique whereby several layers of cloth are placed on top of each other and shapes are cut out in layers of decreasing size. Some of the most famous reverse appliqués are the molas from Panama, worked by Kuna Indian women.
Redwork is a form of counted thread embroidery that uses a red thread (usually silk or cotton) on a white cloth background. It is usually carried out in a double running stitch (Holbein stitch), but other stitches are possible. The patterns produced tend to be geometrical or stylised figurative and floral forms.
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The Quaker tapestry is a commemorative embroidery that illustrates the history of Quakerism (a Christian, non-Conformist religious group; also known as the Society of Friends). The idea for the Tapestry came from Anne Wynn-Wilson, who was influenced by the Bayeux tapestry.
Peter Quentel (also known as Pierre de Quinty) was a printer from Cologne (Germany) in the early sixteenth century. He was the son of Heinrich Quentel (d. 1501), a printer whose books include a range of Lutheran tracts and treatises. His son, Peter Quentel, printed at least one book on embroidery and lace designs. He is sometimes listed as Pierre de Quinty and described as a French Protestant.
