Monday, 24 November 2014
Seasonal Knitting - Harvest Cornucopia
This collection of knitted harvest vegetables and a cornucopia embellishes a table at work. The tiny pumpkins are borrowed from the Halloween tree, and the rest are from various patterns, all scattered across my Raverly projects' page. They were all fun to knit, and contributed to a bit of stash busting.
Tuesday, 18 November 2014
Second Victorian Purse – Finished
This pattern comes from the second of Wicked Woolen’s Two
Victorian Purses.* It is a “modernised” version of A Very Pretty Turkish
Purse.** Knit on larger needles
and with fewer stitches, this newer purse is still close in size to the other
one I made from the original pattern. Of course, not having 19th
century materials to knit with, I have no idea of the exact size of the purse
knit in the 1840s.
This version
was knit on 2 mm/US O needles with DMC Cébélia 10 cotton in green, pink
and white. As with the last purse, the rings are too large so I will have to
look out for smaller ones to ensure a more snug fit.
Tuesday, 11 November 2014
Friday, 31 October 2014
Seasonal Knitting - Happy Halloween
I like to knit tiny things so this year I made ornaments for
a Halloween “tree” which is really a fallen branch from the woods. It stands in
my office and the ornaments are made from a variety of published patterns and
some of my own invention. All of them are scattered across my Ravelry project
page although some of them still need their individual photos. Pumpkin Man has
already appeared in this blog, and The Spider is from the classic Charted
Knitting Design: A Third Treasury of Knitting Patterns by Barbara G. Walker. It
is knit in the most awful nameless acrylic I have had in my stash forever and
that has a nice sheen to it – perfect for the project!
I also put up this little quilt that I made some years ago.
It is entirely hand foundation pieced in cotton fabrics and embellished with
beads. The quilt measures 9 ¼” wide and 10 ½” tall.
I adore the autumn – all the wonderful greens, reds,
burgundies, oranges, golds, yellows, browns, burnt umbers, even pinks, and all here and gone so quickly.
I don’t like horror but I do like the history of the celebrations and
ceremonies of this time of the year. Of course, witches come to mind, and,
although there is no connection with Halloween, I see everything through the eyes
of history so the victims of the Salem Witch Trials come to mind. I was
fortunate enough to visit the Tercentenary memorial a few years ago in early
November.
It was a damp, misty day but some of the gorgeous New
England foliage was still on a few trees and the ground, and, movingly, there
were single stemmed flowers on a few of the memorial benches.
Growing up in a family that loves history, I have spent my
entire life visiting historic sites, houses and memorials. This is one of my
favourites. Its simplicity is deceptive, its message supremely powerful. When I was there it was fairly empty
and so quiet in complete contrast to the hysteria and outrage of the subject of
commemoration. The heartbreaking collection of carved names, fates and
statements were shiny with rain, like tears, and splattered with fallen leaves,
as were the rough stone seats – reminders of true horror. Across the edge of
the entrance area, carved in rough flagstones, were the defiant pleas of the accused,
so the visitor sees them as he or she arrives and, once again, upon leaving.
Saturday, 25 October 2014
Knitted Bag from the V&A – Closer to the Original Size
I have reproduced this knitted bag twice. It comes from the
Textiles Collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum (Museum Number
T.397-1910.) The original bag is knitted in three colours of silk thread, and
lined with silk fabric. It measures roughly 5 ¼” wide by x 6” (13.5 cm x 15.5
cm.) It dates from the mid-19th century and was probably a work bag.
My first bag was the test piece for the pattern (see links below.*) I have never
seen the bag in person and only had three photographs for reference. One from
the website (http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O75483/bag-unknown/
), one from the book Miller’s Collecting Textiles by Patricia Frost, London:
Octopus Publishing Group, Ltd., 2000, and the largest image of all from the
catalogue of the exhibit of the same name, Knit One, Purl One – Historic and
Contemporary Knitting from the V&A’s Collection by Frances Hinchcliffe,
Department of Textiles and Dress, London: Precision Press, 1985, which is
featured here.
This bag was knit in DMC Perle 12 cotton thread on very, very
fine needles which produced much tighter fabric than that of the first bag. I
thought of going up a size in needles for the yellow sections to avoid the
fabric being pulled inwards and at a slant, as had happened with the larger
bag. I did not change the needles, however, and this one was nice and straight
until after I finished lining the bag with pale green imitation silk. The slant
was back although not as badly as with the larger bag.
Like the original, the bag is knitted as one flat piece and
seamed on one side and across the bottom of the bag. The top is closed with a
drawstring. I could not exactly reproduce the fancy beads – mine are simpler
with thick tassels, as on the original.
This bag measures roughly 5 ½” (14 cm.) square, slightly off
from the original’s measurements. I say “roughly” because I measured it lined
and sewn, both of which do not allow the bag to lie completely flat.
Tuesday, 21 October 2014
Trafalgar Quilt
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Today is the 209th anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar.
The famous signal, sent by Admiral Lord Nelson before the battle, “England
expects that every man will do his duty” is portrayed here. The black strips are
not flag poles but act to separate the different sections of the codes from
one another.
I pieced this quilt in the mid-1990s, and then it was
mislaid for almost ten years in my myriad of knitting, spinning, needlework, and over one hundred other
quilts of various sizes and in various stages of production. I found it again,
sometime in 2004, and planned to back and quilt it in that year in preparation
for the 200th anniversary party of the Battle of Trafalgar that I
was planning for October, 2005. Serious family illness, round the clock
nursing, and death intervened, however, in 2005, and the party was cancelled,
and the quilt, once again, was consigned to the WIP stack. This year, during a
similar family situation, I worked on the quilt but now it is finally finished.
The quilt is made of 100% cotton fabrics, the
batting/wadding is Warm & Natural cotton, and it is entirely hand pieced
and hand quilted. Drawing my own
patterns, I used the foundation piecing method for some of the trickier signals
and double-basted/tacked them to hold them in place.
The pins are part of the basting/tacking stage, to be added, in
preparation for the quilting. Needless to say, I had far more thread to rip out
at the end than usual.
The signals are not quilted – only the sashing and outer
borders. There is no quilting pattern, just a series of lines in an abstract
homage to a ship’s rigging.
The quilt measures 62” x 52”, and the signal blocks are 4” x
6”.
Tuesday, 30 September 2014
Quilt for September
I have only a few more reproduction quilts to feature on
this blog. This one is half reproduction and half not quite a reproduction. The
design is intentional. The small squares are reproductions, once again, mostly
from tiny samples I collected over time. The borders and backing are wonderful
prints that are not reproductions but work well with the various older-style
prints and colours. I fell in love with them but had a hard time matching them
to modern prints and so decided, instead, to blend multiple eras.
The squares measure 2 ¼” each and the quilt itself is 44”
square. It is entirely hand pieced, hand quilted and hand finished.
The first photograph is a little tilted as I had to take the picture by myself, standing on a bed and wobbling as I did so – not a method I would recommend.
My historic knitting has been on hold as I spent part of the
summer and September making a modern quilt for a young couple as a wedding
gift. I hope it will be cherished and, perhaps, handed down
and become a piece of the new family’s history.
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