I keep my blog as a personal record of what I'm up to, which might be seen as working towards "An elegant sufficiency, content, retirement, rural quiet, friendship, books, ease and alternate labour, useful life"

I'm certainly not there yet.  There is quite some way to go!

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Thursday
Aug282014

Fiddling about

 

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I’d been admiring the work of Angie Lewin and the St Judes Print Studio for some time and when a friend sent me a card along similar lines, I thought I’d take similar shapes to build a design to play with.  I began by drawing a quick sketch and considered what techniques and processes I could incorporate.  I wanted to put some of the things I’ve been learning from the Bernina Workbooks in there, but also, to try and put a little Silhouette trick or two in there as well.

 

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There’s no point in making things easy if I can build a little difficulty in there, is there?  So, I took a photograph of my drawing with my Note and then used the Samsung Sketch app to trace the design in layers and then copied it to my pc by means of dropbox.

 

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I fiddled about with the layers and tidied the drawing up a bit in Photoshop Elements before importing each shape into the Bernina V7 software and digitising them.

 

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I discovered that much of the detail is lost when importing a .png file.  Like all of it!  From then on, I stuck with .jpg files.

 

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I imported the solid shapes to the Silhouette software and arranged them tightly in the corner so I wouldn’t waste any of the precious rubber stamp material, because here I was going to cut the shapes out so that I could print them onto the fabric if I wished.  All the time, I kept an eye on the relative sizes – it’s so easy to switch resolution settings and so on when moving from one program to another.  So far, it was looking ok though.

 

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I hit “go” and four rubber stamp shapes were cut.

 

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Whilst I was at it, I cut three sets of shapes from some lutradur I had on hand, thinking that I could spray that any colour later and maybe applique them in the design.

 

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I continued to work my way around the design, fiddling about with the settings, trying to change the order of stitching so that the machine would stitch an outline in which to place one of those applique shapes before it went on to do something else over the top.

 

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Just before we went for a spot of lunch, I thought I’d print out the design and discovered, quite by chance, that doing that creates a perfect sewing plan.  Yes!

 

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After lunch, things began to get exciting.  I realised that I could use the grid supplied with the embroidery hoop to line things up, and using the print out (which had markings for the centre of the hoop and for both axes marked, too) I carefully marked my gridded stamp block and lined it up…

 

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Time to begin sewing.  In no time at all, a lovely oval shape was being filled with a delicate blackwork pattern.  Was that green paisley stamp going to be in the right place?

 

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Too early to tell, but sure enough, the machine stitched those placement shapes out and stopped for me to put the sprayed bits of lutradur in place.  I used a bit of Pritt stick to hold them down for the time being.

 

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As it happened, that green paisley wasn’t in exactly the right place but I don’t think it mattered one jot.  Everything had fallen into place otherwise and I was feeling pretty pleased with my day’s work!

 

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Once the sewing was finished and all the joining threads cut away, I felt even more delighted with the outcome.  Not only had everything remained in the right place, but the silhouette cut shapes had fitted in perfectly too.  There’s a bit of a muddly area in the centre, where the grey flower head overlays the paisley shape but that could be easily sorted.  I particularly love the blackwork filling though and will stitch this one out again in different colours, swapping around the applique pieces and the stamped areas, too.  Having saved all those stems individually, I can also move them around and create a different arrangement as well.

I also think that this design doesn’t look quite so “manufactured” as my earlier efforts.  Just that little bit of (inaccurate!) hand printing and a little bit of flappy fabric not completely stitched down makes all the difference, don’t you agree?

Reader Comments (6)

Wow!

August 28, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterMary

Love the fruit of your labour. I am very fond of Angie Lewin's work - makes me think of the 50ties and especially an apron my mother had. She loved rumaging through the remnants in the curtain shop!
You are really getting back into digitising and embroidery. Welcome back!

August 28, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterMarianne

My, You have had fun. I had the stamp stuf as a gift too and was wondering if it was any good. :-) I got it out about a week ago and haven't had time to do anything with it since.
MIne came with a Sihouette stamp pad... wonder if there is anything special about the ink. Probably not though.
I love what you have done and I too like Lewin's work and have her book.

August 28, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterDorothy Gibbs

ok, I give up. .. This is my fourth and LAST try at posting.. twice from the tablet and now twice from the desktop.. what's up with that I do not know. In any case.. I love this! The offset of the stitching on the one piece is what makes it for me. It shows the hand and the mind of the maker because the machine would have been "perfectly" on or off, not randomly appearing..and not nearly as interesting. The slightly off kilter character is exactly what was needed. Hard to quantify. This really hits at what we were talking about earlier!

August 29, 2014 | Unregistered Commenterjordi

Thanks for persevering Jordi!!

I agree. You hit the nail on the head. These things are so much more effective with the inclusion of the smallest bit of handwork/personal input. I must remember that!

August 30, 2014 | Registered CommenterGill Thomas

I too just love these patterns, and have a stash of her cards. I just love the design you made and the embroidery....

September 13, 2014 | Unregistered CommenterNoelle Mace

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