Smoked eels, pleasant post at home and abroad, a cross and some flowers

It’s been a while – we’ve been to The Netherlands to visit family, but now I’m back from the old country, and as usual I’ve brought back lots of things I can’t get here, like my favourite shampoo, various types of biscuit and sausage, salt liquorice, and (a special birthday treat) these:

Smoked eels

They’re smoked eels. All right, so they don’t look particularly attractive, but they are very very tasty, apart from which they remind me of my grandmother with whom I used to eat them. Lovely smoked eels and memories of Oma – an unbeatable combination.

With the Euro looking encouragingly weak against the pound this was obviously a good time to order things from the Netherlands, especially as I could have them sent to my mother and so save on postage. So when we got there, two interesting parcels were waiting for me: one contained several very thin marker pens for transferring designs on to fabric, the other a piece of Kingston linen and a piece of Normandie fabric (a non-count cotton/linen blend). I’ve never tried the latter before, but it feels very nice so I’m looking forward to stitching on it; perhaps a pretty strawberry design from the out-of-copyright book Samplers and Stitches by Mrs. Archibald Christie. I have a fancy to stitch it relatively large, in stem stitch outline only.

Sakura Pigma Micron pens Kingston linen and Normandie fabric

Of course when we came home there was a stack of post waiting for us; the usual pre-election leaflets, bank statements and other decidedly less-than-exciting stuff, but some gems as well. The first one was almost literally a gem, as it contained some goldwork materials from Golden Hinde. Two thicknesses of Rococco in gold, silver and copper, some lovely lacy milliary wire (one of which is destined to become a caterpillar in a toadstool design I’m working on), and some spangles.

Rococco and milliary wire from Golden Hinde

The next one was rather surprising – I’d ordered a few things from Sew & So last month, and they’d emailed to say the parcel had been sent but without the 5″ flexi-hoop I’d ordered, which was out of stock and would be sent later. However, when the parcel arrived, it contained the whole order, including the flexi-hoop. “They probably got some new ones in just after they’d emailed me,” I thought, and went off to the Netherlands. But there among the post was another S&S parcel, with another 5″ flexi-hoop. I rang them to find out how to return it, but they said not to worry and to keep it with their compliments. Great service, as always.

And finally there was an envelope from America. After an email conversation following some enquiries of mine, Barbara at Tristan Brooks (who was extremely helpful about the cost of sending things to England, and describing fabrics) sent me two samples of twill fabric: the Legacy Linen Twill they sell (and which is one of Mary Corbet’s favourites) and a Scottish twill more like the ones that are sold in the UK (which they don’t sell but she happened to have a bit of). This way I could feel the difference before deciding what I needed. Customer service beyond the call of duty is obviously going strong on both sides of the Atlantic!

An extra hoop from Sew and So, and two types of twill from Tristan Brooks

So, while on holiday, did I manage to stitch the floral cross plus a few of the Kelly Fletcher flowers I’d taken along? Ha! Or in other words, no. I didn’t even finish the cross. But I did get quite a long way, with only the blue flower left to do. Having no access to Mary Corbet’s version as there is no internet at my mother’s, I rather made it up as I went along: split stitch outline and long-and-short stitch for the cross, in three shades of brown which unfortunately weren’t the best combination as the two lightest ones were nearly identical, and the darkest one was quite a lot darker. Oh well, I did say I’d work with the silks I already had in my stash (this is the Alyce Schroth silk). I’m not altogether happy with some of the stitches on the curved edges of the cross, but couldn’t quite work out how to make them into a smoother outline while covering the split stitching. Some work needed there.

Split stitch outline for the cross The cross filled in with long and short stitch

Next was stem stitch in one strand of medium green Pearsall’s silk for the stems (with slightly padded satin stitch for the little bobbles on the ends of the tendrils), fishbone stitch in one shade of green (light or medium) for the small leaves, and long and short stitch in two shades without first outlining for the larger leaves; I can’t say I see a great difference, but perhaps a closer look in good light with my glasses off will show that there is one. As I said before I haven’t got much experience with l & s stitch, and on some of the leaves it looks more like split stitch filling, but on the whole I’m pleased with the way it turned out. Oh, the little rosebud is also l & s, in two shades of pink/red Soie de Paris using one strand. The blue flower will be outlined in split stitch and then filled with l & s in two shades of blue Pearsall’s silk, with the centre and some little lines in yellow. I picked up most of these Pearsall’s Filoselle silks in a lovely needlework shop in Cumbria some years back, where they were in a half price sale. They are lovely to work with and have a beautiful sheen – it really is a shame Pearsall’s have discontinued them. Incidentally, the difference between the two greens isn’t very big, but it is more noticeable in real life than in the photograph; very annoying that the camera won’t simply see what our eyes see!

The leaves and bud finished (flash) The leaves and bud finished (no flash)

So all the prepared flowers are still waiting, drawn on the fabric but unstitched, in my little surface embroidery folder. But although I haven’t been stitching them, I have been thinking about them, and I’ve decided I will probably make them into single-stitch projects – or as much as is feasible, anyway. That is to say, one flower will be done in buttonhole stitch only, and another in chain stitch (or the heavy variety) only, and a third in closed Cretan stitch only and so on, with a bit of stem stitch (possibly knotted) or back stitch for those parts that can’t easily be worked in the stitch chosen for that particular flower. Together, they should then become a sort of floral stitch sample; I may even turn them into a little fabric book.

Freebies, cats and awkward goldwork

Earlier this week, as I was continuing my chronological journey through Mary Corbet’s blog, I stumbled across some lovely freebies – always something that brightens up the day (even if it doesn’t particularly need brightening). Writing about some of her favourite websites, she mentioned a designer who was doing a series of Jacobean leaves. Now I’ve only got to 2009 on Mary’s blog, so it does happen that interesting-looking links turn out to be no more, but fortunately Kelly Fletcher’s site is still very much alive. I really like the clean look of her designs, lots of deceptively simple outlines filled with a variety of stitches; her cut fruits are great fun, and I have fallen in love with the four cats on a wall. The peachy corally flower is a close second. And then there is a very pretty set of 12 floral designs plus a Christmas tree which she offers as free downloads on her Craftsy page – numbers 2, 4, 7 and 11 are now officially on my To Do list! (What a happy coincidence that, taking advantage of the weak Euro, I have just ordered some very nice surface embroidery fabric from my favourite Dutch needlework shop…)

Cat design by Kelly Fletcher Flower design by Kelly Fletcher

These were not the only inspiring designs I found on Needle n’ Thread; some posts earlier Mary had discussed a needlework magazine called Samplers & Antique Needlework, and she including pictures of some back issues she had managed to get. The one that immediately drew my attention was the Spring 2005 issue, with a lovely little goldwork project on the cover.

Samplers & Antique Needlework vol. 38

Isn’t it dainty? I like the traditional motif, the fact that it uses fairly basic goldwork techniques (nothing I haven’t come across yet, anyway, so it can’t be too advanced smiley, its modest size – but these are all rationalisations after the fact; the simple truth is that it immediately appealed to me, and I wanted to stitch it. To do this, I will of course need the magazine. And that turned out not to be quite as straightforward as you might think. There are second-hand copies about on eBay, but they are all in America, and postage alone is over $16; even if I got it at the lowest price offered it would come to nearly £13, a bit steep when all you want from the magazine is one small design.

But wait a minute, Mary mentioned back issues. Off I went to see if the magazine had a website. The good news is that it does. The even better news is that they do back issues, and they do them as downloads, so no postage. Yay! Then I looked a bit more closely and realised they only went back a few years. It was possible that they had back issues that were not on the website, so I contacted them to ask. The lady who replied said that no, they didn’t have digital back issues that far back, but they did sell a very good goldwork book, and she’d forwarded my email to the editorial department. The goldwork book was one I already have, and more to the point it doesn’t have the design I was asking about, but perhaps the editorial staff will be able to help.

If not, I will try my husband’s idea. I showed him a fairly large picture of the design that I had found on the internet and pointed out what techniques were used. I sighed that I could easily stitch it from the photograph if it weren’t for the fact that I am a serious respecter of copyright. He then suggested that I write to the publishers, and offer to pay them the cover price of the magazine, in return for which they allow me to stitch the design. They get the same money as if I had actually bought the magazine, but they don’t have to send me anything (although if they did want to email me a list of the materials used so that I don’t have to make an educated guess, I wouldn’t complain) and I save the postage. Are there any drawbacks at all to this brilliant plan?