Gold Pictorial

July 12, 2009 8:05 am | Uncategorized

Gold Pictorial
Gold Pictorial

English embroidery

Medieval period

Anglo-Saxon

Detail of stitching on the Bayeux Tapestry.

Little physical evidence survives to reconstruct the early development of English embroidery before the Norman Conquest of 1066. Stitches reinforcing the seams of a garment in the Sutton Hoo ship burial may have been intended as decoration, and so be classed as embroidery, and fragments of a scrolling border worked in stem stitch were recovered from a grave in Kempston, Bedfordshire. Some embroidered pieces of about 850 preserved in Maaseik, Belgium, are generally assumed to be Anglo-Saxon work based on their similarity to contemporary manuscript illustrations and sculptures of animals and interlace.

The documentary evidence is rather richer than the physical remains. Part of the reason for both these facts is the taste among the late Anglo-Saxon elite for embroidering using lavish amounts of precious metal thread, especially gold, which both gave items a magnificence and expense worth recording, and meant that they were well worth burning to recover the bullion. Three old vestments, almost certainly Anglo-Saxon, recycled in this way at Canterbury Cathedral in the 1370s, produced over 250 of gold – a huge amount. Richly embroidered hangings were used in both churches and the houses of the rich, but vestments were the most richly embellished of all, of a “particularly English” richness. Most of these were sent back to Normandy or burnt for their metal after the Norman conquest. An image of part of a huge gold acanthus flower on the back of a gold-bordered chasuble, almost certainly depicting a specific real vestment, can be seen in the Benedictional of St. thelwold (fol. 118v).

Scholars agree that three embroidered items from the coffin of St Cuthbert in Durham are Anglo-Saxon work, based on an inscription describing their commission by Queen lffld between 909 and 916. These include a stole and maniple ornamented with figures of prophets outlined in stem stitch and filled with split stitch, with halos in gold thread worked with underside couching. The quality of this silk embroidery on a gold background is “unparalleled in Europe at this time.”

Scholarly consensus favours an Anglo-Saxon, probably Kentish origin for the Bayeux tapestry. This famous narrative of the Conquest is not a true woven tapestry but an embroidered hanging worked in wool yarn on a tabby-woven linen ground using outline or stem stitch for lettering and the outlines of figures, and couching or laid work for filling in figures.

Opus Anglicanum

Main article: Opus Anglicanum

The Butler-Bowden Cope, 13301350, V&A Museum no. T.36-1955.

The Anglo-Saxon embroidery style combining split stitch and couching with silk and goldwork in gold or silver-gilt thread of the Durham examples flowered from the 12th to the 14th centuries into a style known to contemporaries as Opus Anglicanum or “English work”. Opus Anglicanum was made for both ecclesiastical and secular use on clothing, hangings, and other textiles. It was usually worked on linen or dark silks, or later, worked as individual motifs on linen and applied to velvet.

Throughout this period, the designs of embroidery paralleled fashions in manuscript illumination and architecture. Work of this period often featured continuous light scrolls and spirals with or without foliations, in addition to figures of kings and saints in geometrical frames or Gothic arches.

Opus Anglicanum was famous throughout Europe. A “Gregory of London” was working in Rome as a gold-embroiderer to Pope Alexander IV in 1263, and the Vatican inventory in Rome of 1295 records well over 100 pieces of English work. Notable surviving examples of Opus Anglicanum include Syon Cope and the Butler-Bowden Cope of 133050 in the Victoria and Albert Museum, embroidered with silver and silver-gilt thread and coloured silks on silk velvet, which was disassembled and later reassembled into a cope in the 19th century.

Professional embroiderers

By the 13th century, most English goldwork was made in London workshops, which produced ecclesiastical work, clothing and furnishings for royalty and the nobility, heraldic banners and horse-trappings, and the ceremonial regalia for the great Livery Companies of the City of London and for the court.

The founding of the embroiderer’s guild in London is attributed to the 14th century or earlier, but its early documents were lost in the Great Fire of London in the 17th century. An indenture of 23 March 1515 records the establishment of Broderers’ Hall in Cutter Lane in that year,, and the guild was officially incorporated (or reincorporated) by Royal Charter under Elizabeth I in 1561 as the Worshipful Company of Broderers. Professional embroiders were also attached to the great households of England, but it is unlikely that those working far from London were members of the Company.

From the middle of the 14th century, money that had previously been spent on luxury goods like lavish embroidery was redirected to military expenditure, and imported Italian figured silks competed with native embroidery traditions. Varieties of design in textiles succeeded each other very rapidly, and they were more readily available than the more leisurely produced needlework. The work produced by the London workshops was simplified to meet the demands of this deteriorating market. The new techniques required less work and smaller quantities of expensive materials. Surface couching replaced underside couching, and allover embroidery was replaced by individual motifs worked on linen and then applied to figured silks or silk velvets. Increasingly, designs for embroidery were derived directly from woven patterns, “thus losing not only their former individuality and richness, but also their former … story-telling interest.”

Renaissance to Restoration

Elizabeth I wears a blackwork chemise and partlet and a gown embroidered with gold thread and studded with pearls. The Phoenix Portrait by Nicholas Hilliard, c. 157576

The second great flowering of English embroidery, after Opus Anglicanum, took place in the reign of Elizabeth I.

Although the majority of surviving English embroidery from the medieval period was intended for church use, this demand decreased radically with the Protestant Reformation. In contrast, the bulk of the surving embroidery of the Tudor, Elizabethan, and Jacobean eras is for domestic use, whether for clothing or household decoration. The stable society that existed between the accession of Elizabeth in 1558 and the English Civil War encouraged the building and furnishing of new houses, in which rich textiles played a part. Some embroidery was imported in this period, including the canvas work bed valances once thought to be English but now attributed to France, but the majority of work was made in Englandnd increasingly, by skilled amateurs, mostly women, working domestically, to designs by professional men and women, and later to published pattern books.

Tudor and Jacobean styles

A general taste for abundant surface ornamentation is reflected in both household furnishings and in fashionable court clothing from the mid-16th century through the reign of James I. A 1547 account of the wardobe of Henry VIII shows that just over half of the 224 items were ornamented with embroidery of some kind, and embroidered shirts and accessories were popular New Year’s gift to the Tudor monarchs. Fine linen shirts, chemises, ruffs, collars, coifs and caps were embroidered in monochrome silks and edged in lace. The monochrome works are classified as blackwork embroidery even when worked in other colours; red, crimson, blue, green, and pink were also popular.

Outer clothing and furnishings of woven silk brocades and velvets were ornamented with gold and silver embroidery in linear or scrolling patterns, applied bobbin lace and passementerie, and small jewels.

Margaret Laton’s embroidered jacket is typical of the early 17th century style. This jacket has survived and is in the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Appliqu work was popular in the Tudor era, especially for large-scale works such as wall hangings. In Medieval England, rich clothing had been bequeathed to the church to be remade into vestments; following the dissolution of the monasteries at the Reformation, the rich silks and velvets of the great monastic houses were cut up and repurposed to make hangings and cushions for private homes. Shapes cut from opulent fabrics and small motifs or slips worked on fine linen canvas were applied a background fabric of figured silk, velvet, or plain wool and embellished with embroidery, in a style deriving from the later, simpler forms of Medieval work.

Canvaswork in which the linen ground was covered entirely by tent, gobelin, or cross stitches in wool or silk thread was often used for cushion covers and small bags. Notable examples like the Bradford carpet, a pictorial table cover, were likley the work of professionals in the Broderers’ Company.

Polychrome (multicoloured) silk embroidery became fashionable in the reign of Elizabeth, and from c. 1590 to 1620 a uniquely English fashion arose for embroidered linen jackets worn informally or as part of masquing costume. These jackets usually featured scrolling floral patterns worked in a multiplicity of stitches. Similar patterns worked in 2-ply worsted wool called crewel on heavy linen for furnishings are characteristic of Jacobean embroidery.

Pattern sources

Blackwork embroidery of the 1530s (left) and 1590s (right).

Pattern books for geometric embroidery and needlelace were published in Germany as early as the 1520s. These featured the stepped, angular patterns characteristic of early blackwork, ultimately deriving from medieval Islamic Egypt. These patterns, seen in the portraits of Hans Holbein the Younger, were worked over counted threads in a double running stitch (later called Holbein stitch by English embroiderers).

The first pattern book for embroidery published in England was Moryssche & Damaschin renewed & encreased very popular for Goldsmiths & Embroiderers by Thomas Geminus (1545).Moryssche refers to Moorish or arabesque designs of spirals, scrolls, and zigzags. Scrolling patterns of flowers and leaves filled with geometric filling stitches are characteristic of blackwork from the 1540s through 1590s, and similar patterns worked in coloured silks appear from the 1560s, outlined in backstitch and filled with detached buttonhole stitch.

Additional pattern books for embroiderers appeared late in the century, followed by Richard Shorleyker’s A Schole-house for the Needle published in London in 1624. Other sources for embroidery designs were the popular herbals and emblem books. Both domestic and professional embroiderers probably relied on skilled draughtsmen or pattern-drawers to interpret these design sources and draw them out on linen ready to be stitched.

Early samplers

English blackwork cushion cover, late 16th century, made from a woman’s dress. Linen embroidered with silk and metallic thread, using buttonhole, chain, double running, overcast, plaited braid, and square open work stitches. Art Institute of Chicago textile collection.

Main article: Sampler (needlework)

Printed patterns books were not easily obtainable, and a sampler or embroidered record of stitches and patterns was the most common form of reference. 16th century English samplers were stitched on a narrow band of fabric and totally covered with stitches. These band samplers were highly valued, often being mentioned in wills and passed down through the generations. These samplers were stitched using a variety of needlework styles, threads, and ornament.

The earliest dated surviving sampler, housed in the Victoria and Albert Museum, was made by Jane Bostocke who included her name and the date 1598 in the inscription, but the earliest documentary reference to sampler making goes back another hundred years, to the 1502 household expense accounts of Elizabeth of York, which record the purchase of an ell of linen to make a sampler for the queen.

From the early 17th century, samplers became a more formal and stylized part of a girl’s education, even as the motifs and patterns on the samplers faded from fashion.

Pictorial embroidery and stumpwork

Main article: Stumpwork

Mirror frame with stumpwork figures of Charles I and Henrietta Maria, 1630s

Following the death of James I and the accession of Charles I, elaborately embroidered clothing faded from popularity under the dual influences of rising Puritanism and the new court’s taste for French fashion with its lighter silks in solid colours accessorised with masses of linen and lace. In this new climate, needlework was praised by moralists as an appropriate occupation for girls and women in the home, and domestic embroidery for household use flourished. Embroidered pictures, mirror frames, workboxes, and other domestic objects of this era often depicted Biblical stories featuring characters dressed in the fashion of Charles and his queen Henrietta Maria, or after the Restoration, Charles II and Catherine of Braganza.

These stories were executed in canvaswork or in coloured silks in a uniquely English style called raised work, usually known by its modern name stumpwork. Raised work arose from the detached buttonhole stitch fillings and braided scrolls of late Elizabethan embroidery. Areas of the embroidery were worked on white or ivory silk grounds in a variety of stitches and prominent features were padded with horsehair or lambswool, or worked around wooden shapes or wire frames. Ribbons, spangles, beads, small pieces of lace, canvaswork slips, and other objects were added to increase the dimensionality of the finished work.

Crewel

Main articles: Crewel Work and Jacobean embroidery

Fanciful crewel leaf motif

Sets of bed hangings embroidered in crewel wools were another characteristic product of the Stuart era. These were worked on a new fabric, a natural twill weave from Bruges with a linen warp and cotton weft. Crewel wools of the 17th century were firmly twisted unlike the soft wools sold under that name today, and were dyed in deep rich shades of green, blue, red, yellow, and brown. Motifs of flowers and trees, with birds, insects, and animals, were worked at large scale in a variety of stitches. The origins of this work are in the polychrome embroidery on scrolling stems of the Elizabethan era, later blended with the Tree of Life and other motifs of Indian palampores, introduced by the trade of the East India Company.

After the Restoration, the patterns became ever more fanciful and exuberant. “It is an almost impossible task to describe the large leaves, since they bear no resemblance to anything natural, they are, however, rarely angular in outline, rejoicing rather in sweeping curves, and drooping points, curled over to display the under side of the leaf, a device that gave opening for much ingenuity in the arrangement of the stitches.”

Although usually called “Jacobean embroidery” by modern stitchers, crewel has its origins in the reign of James I but remained popular through the reign of Queen Anne and into the early 18th century, when a return to the simpler forms of the earliest work became fashionable.

Glorious Revolution to the Great War

Later Stuart

The accession of William III and Mary II following the Glorious Revolution of 1688 triggered another change in needlework fashions. Associations of stumpwork with the reign of the deposed Stuarts combined with Mary’s Dutch taste ushered in new styles influenced by Indian chintzes. From the 1690s, household furnishings such as chair covers and firescreens were the focus of embroidery in the home.

Georgian

Stoke Edith Wall Hanging, linen canvas embroidered with silk and wool, with some details in appliqu, 1710-1720 V&A Museum no. T.568-1996.

In the Georgian era, canvaswork was popular for chair coverings, footstools, screens and card tables. Embroidered pictures and upholstery both reflected the popular pastoral theme of men and women in the sheep-cropped English countryside. Other recurring themes include exotic Tree of Life patterns influenced by earlier crewelwork and chinoiserie with its fanciful imagery of an imaginary China, asymmetry in format and whimsical contrasts of scale. In contrast, needlepainting in silks and wools produced naturalistic portraits and domestic scenes.

Embroidery was once again an important element of fashion in the early 18th century. Aprons, stomachers, hanging pockets, shoes, gowns, and men’s coats and waistcoats were all decorated with embroidery.

Later samplers

Cross-stitch alphabet sampler worked by Elizabeth Laidman, 1760.

By the 18th century, sampler making had become an important part of girls’ education in boarding and institutional schools. A commonplace component was now an alphabet with numerals, possibly accompanied by various crowns and coronets, all used in marking household linens. Traditional embroidered motifs were now rearranged into decorative borders framing lengthy inscriptions or verses of an “improving” nature and small pictorial scenes. These new samplers were more useful as a record of accomplishment to be hung on the wall than as a practical stitch guide.

Tambourwork

Tambourwork was a new chainstitch embroidery fad of the 1780s influenced by Indian embroidered muslins. Stitched originally with a needle and later with a small hook, tambour takes its name from the round embroidery frame in which it was worked. Tambour was suited to the light, flowing ornament appropriate to the new muslin dresses of this period, and patterns were readily available in periodicals like the Lady’s Magazine which debuted in 1770.

Tambourwork was copied by machine early in the Industrial Revolution. As early as 1810, a “worked muslin cap … done in tambour stitch by a steam-engine” was on the market, and machine-made netting was in general use as a background by the 1820s.

Smocking

Main articles: smocking and smock-frock

The linen smock-frocks worn by rural workers, especially shepherds and waggoners, in parts of England and Wales from the early eighteenth century featured fullness across the back, breast, and sleeves folded into “tubes” (narrow unpressed pleats) held in place and decorated by smocking, a type of surface embroidery in a honeycomb pattern across the pleats that controls the fullness while allowing a degree of stretch.

Embroidery styles for smock-frocks varied by region, and a number of motifs became traditional for various occupations: wheel-shapes for carters and wagoners, sheep and crooks for shepherds, and so on. Most of this embroidery was done in heavy linen thread, often in the same color as the smock.

By the mid-nineteenth century, wearing of traditional smock-frocks by country laborers was dying out, and a romantic nostalgia for England’s rural past led to a fashion for women’s and children’s clothing loosely styled after smock-frocks. These garments are generally of very fine linen or cotton and feature delicate smocking embroidery done in cotton floss in contrasting colors; smocked garments with pastel-colored embroidery remain popular for babies.

Berlin work

Berlin work pattern

Main article: Berlin wool work

In the early 19th century, canvaswork in tent or petit point stitch again became popular. The new fashion, using printed patterns and coloured tapestry wools imported from Berlin, was called Berlin wool work. Patterns and wool for Berlin work appeared in London in 1831. Berlin work was stitched to hand-coloured or charted patterns, leaving little room for individual expression, and was so popular that “Berlin work” became synonymous with “canvaswork”. Its chief characteristic was intricate three-dimensional looks created by careful shading. By mid-century, Berlin work was executed in bright colours made possible by the new synthetic dyes. Berlin work was very durable and was made into furniture covers, cushions, bags, and slippers as well as for embroidered “copies” of popular paintings. The craze for Berlin work peaked around 1850 and died out in the 1870s, under the influence of a competing aesthetic that would become known as art needlework.

Art needlework

Artichoke art needlework panel, wool on linen, Morris & Co..

Main article: Art needlework

In 1848, the influential Gothic Revival architect G. E. Street co-wrote a book called Ecclesiastical Embroidery. He was a staunch advocate of abandoning faddish Berlin work in favour of more expressive embroidery techniques based on Opus Anglicanum. Street’s one-time apprentice, the Pre-Raphaelite poet, artist, and textile designer William Morris, embraced this aesthetic, resurrecting the techniques of freehand surface embroidery which had been popular from the Middle Ages to the 18th century. The new style, called art needlework, emphasized flat patterns with delicate shading in satin stitch accompanied by a number of novelty stitches. It was worked in silk or wool thread dyed with natural dyes on wool, silk, or linen grounds.

By the 1870s, Morris’s decorative arts firm Morris & Co. was offering both designs for embroideries and finished works in the art needlwork style. Morris became active in the growing movement to return originality and mastery of technique to embroidery. Morris and his daughter May were early supporters of the Royal School of Art Needlework, founded in 1872, whose aim was to “restore Ornamental Needlework for secular purposes to the high place it once held among decorative arts.”

Textiles worked in art needlework styles were featured at the various Arts and Crafts exhibitions from the 1890s to the Great War.

Modern period

Organizations whose origins date back as far as the Middle Ages remain active in supporting embroidery in Britain today.

The Worshipful Company of Broderers is now a charitable organiztion supporting excellence in embroidery.

The Royal School of Needlework is based at Hampton Court Palace and is engaged in textile restoration and conservation, as well as training professional embroiderers through a new 2-year Foundation Degree programme (in conjunction with the University for the Creative Arts) with a top-up to full BA(Hons) being available for the first time in the 2011/12 academic year. Previously, apprentices were trained by an intensive 3-year in-house programme. It is a registered charity and receives commissions from public bodies and individuals, including the Hastings embroidery of 1965 commemorating the 900th anniversary of the Battle of Hastings the following year, and the Overlord embroidery of 1968 commemorating the D-Day invasion of France during World War II, now in the D-Day museum in Southsea, Portsmouth.

The Embroiderers’ Guild, also based at Hampton Court, was founded in 1906 by sixteen former students of the Royal School of Art Needlework to represent the interests of embroidery. It is active in education and exhibition.

Notes

^ Beck 1992, pp. 4444

^ a b c d e f Levey and King 1993, p. 12

^ a b c Embroiderers’ Guild 1984, p. 81

^ a b c d Fitwzwilliam and Hand 1912, “Introduction”

^ a b Embroiderers’ Guild 1984, p. 54

^ Coatsworth, Elizabeth: “Stitches in Time: Establishing a History of Anglo-Saxon Embroidery”, in Netherton and Owen-Crocker 2005, pp. 67

^ a b Levey and King 1993, p. 11

^ The Maaseik Embroideries, details and photos from Historical needlework resources.

^ Dodwell, p. 181

^ Dodwell, p. 182

^ Dodwell, pp. 129-145, 174-187, and Plate D.

^ Maniple and Stole of St Cuthbert details and photos from Historical needlework resources.

^ Coatsworth 2005, p. 16

^ Coatsworth 2005, pp. 2223

^ Wilson 1985, pp.201227

^ a b Jourdain 1912, pp. 68

^ Lemon, 2004

^ Jourdain 1912, pp. 1315

^ a b c Levey and King 1993, p. 17

^ Norris p. 225

^ Jourdain 1912, p. 56

^ Jourdain 1912, p. 15

^ a b Digby 1964, p. 21

^ Levey and King 1993, pp. 13 and 15

^ a b Hayward 2007, p. 360361

^ a b Arnold 2008, p. 9

^ a b c d Levey 1993, pp.1617

^ Arnold 1985, pp. PAGES

^ Arnold 2008, p. 6

^ a b c North, Susan. “‘An Instrument of profit, pleasure, and of ornament’: Embroidered Tudor and Jacobean Dress Accessories.” In Morrall and Watt 2008, p. 4347

^ Digby 1984, pp. 5152

^ Fawdry and Brown, p. 16

^ a b Gueter, Ruth. “Embroidered Biblical Narratives and Their Social Context.” In Morrall and Watt 2008, p. 4347

^ Hughes, p.22

^ Beck 1995, pp. 5458

^ Geuter, p. 73

^ a b Beck 1995, pp. 6383

^ Hughes, p. 37

^ Beck 1995, p. 70

^ Beck 1995, pp. 8687

^ Hughes, pp. 41, 80

^ Hughes, p.80

^ Marshall 1980, pp. 17-19

^ a b Berman 2000

^ Parry 1983, pp. 1011.

^ Quoted in Parry 1983, pp. 1819.

^ Parry, Linda. “Textiles”. In Lochnan, Schoenherr, and Silver 1996, p. 156

^ “Worshipful Company of Broderers official site”. http://www.broderers.co.uk/. Retrieved 2009-01-25. 

^ “Royal School of Needlework official site”. http://www.royal-needlework.co.uk/. Retrieved 2009-01-25. 

^ “Embroiderers’ Guild official site”. http://www.embroiderersguild.com/. Retrieved 2009-01-25. 

References

Arnold, Janet (1988). Queen Elizabeth’s Wardrobe Unlock’d. W S Maney and Son Ltd , Leeds. ISBN 090128620. 

Arnold, Janet (November 2008). Patterns of Fashion 4: The Cut and Construction of Linen Shirts, Smocks, Neckwear, Headwear and Accessories for Men and Women C. 1540-1660. Macmillan. ISBN 978033357-821. 

Beck, Thomasina (1992). The Embroiderer’s Flowers. David and Charles. ISBN 0715399012. 

Beck, Thomasina (1995). The Embroiderer’s Story. David and Charles. ISBN 0715302388. 

Berman, Pat (2000). “Berlin Work”. American Needlepoint Guild. http://www.needlepoint.org/Archives/01-01/berlinwork.php. Retrieved 2009-01-24. 

Digby, George Wingfield (1964). Elizabethan Embroidery. Thomas Yoseloff. 

Dodwell, C.R. (1982). Anglo-Saxon Art, A New Perspective. Manchester UP (US edn. Cornell, 1985). ISBN 071900926X. 

Embroiderers’ Guild Practical Study Group (1984). Needlework School. QED Publishers. ISBN 0890097852. 

Fawdry, Marguerite, and Deborah Brown (1980). The Book of Samplers. St. Martin’s Press. ISBN 0312090064. 

Fitzwilliam,Ada Wentworth, and A. F. Morris Hands (1912). Jacobean Embroidery. Kegan Paul. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/18971/18971-h/18971-h.htm. 

Gostelow, Mary (1976). Blackwork. Batsford; Dover reprint 1998. ISBN 0-486-40178-2. 

Hughes, Therle (No date). English Domestic Needlework 16601860. Abbey Fine Arts Press, London. 

Jourdain, Margaret (1912). “English Secular Embroidery from Saxon to Tudor Times”. The History of English Secular Embroidery. Dutton and Co.. http://books.google.com/books?id=W4BAAAAAIAAJ. Retrieved 2008-01-19. 

Lemon, Jane (2004). Metal Thread Embroidery. Sterling. ISBN 071348926X. 

Levey, S. M. and D. King (1993). The Victoria and Albert Museum’s Textile Collection Vol. 3: Embroidery in Britain from 1200 to 1750. Victoria and Albert Museum. ISBN 1851771263. 

Lochnan, Katharine A., Douglas E. Schoenherr, and Carole Silver (eds.) (1996). The Earthly Paradise: Arts and Crafts by William Morris and His Circle from Canadian Collections. Key Porter Books. ISBN 1-55013-450-7. 

Marshall, Beverly (1980). Smocks and Smocking. Van Nostrand Rheinhold. ISBN 0442282699. 

Netherton, Robin, and Gale R. Owen-Crocker, editors, (2005). Medieval Clothing and Textiles, Volume 1. Boydell Press. ISBN 1843831236. 

Netherton, Robin, and Gale R. Owen-Crocker, editors, (2006). Medieval Clothing and Textiles, Volume 2. Boydell Press. ISBN 1843832038. 

Norris, Herbert (1938 (reprinted 1997)). Tudor Costume and Fashion. J. M. Dent; Dover Publications (reprint). ISBN 0486298450. 

Parry, Linda (1983). William Morris Textiles. Viking Press. ISBN 0670770744. 

Todd, Pamela (2001). Pre-Raphaelites at Home. Watson-Guptill Publications. ISBN 0-8230-4285-5. 

Watt, Melinda and Andrew Morrall (2008). English Embroidery in the Metropolitan Museum 1575-1700: ‘Twixt Art and Nature. Metropolitan Museum of Art with the Bard Graduate Centre for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design and Culture. ISBN 030012967X. 

Wilson, David M. (1985). The Bayeux Tapestry. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0500251223. 

v  d  e

Embroidery

Styles

Assisi  Bargello  Berlin work  Blackwork  Broderie Anglaise  Broderie perse  Candlewicking  Canvas work  Counted-thread  Crewel  Cross-stitch  Cutwork  Darning  Drawn thread work  Free embroidery  Goldwork  Hardanger  Machine  Needlepoint  Quillwork  Smocking  Sprang  Stumpwork  Surface  Suzani  Trianglepoint  Whitework

Stitches

Backstitch  Blanket  Brick  Buttonhole  Chain stitch  Couching and laid work  Cross stitches  Embroidery stitch  Featherstitch  Holbein  Parisian  Peyote  Running  Satin stitch  Sashiko  Shisha  Straight stitch  Tent stitch

Tools

and materials

Aida cloth  Embroidery hoop  Embroidery thread  Evenweave  Perforated paper  Plainweave  Plastic canvas  Sampler  Slip  Yarn

Regional

and historical

Art needlework  Bunka shishu  Brazilian  Chikan  Chinese  English   Indian  Jacobean  Kaitag   Kantha  Kasuti   Korean  Mountmellick  Persian  Opus Anglicanum  Suzhou  Ukrainian   Vietnamese  Zardozi

Embroideries

Apocalypse Tapestry  Bayeux Tapestry  Bradford carpet  Hastings Embroidery  Hestia tapestry  Margaret Laton’s jacket  New World Tapestry  Overlord embroidery  Quaker Tapestry

Designers

and embroiderers

Leon Conrad  Kaffe Fassett  Juanita Growing Thunder Fogarty   Marilyn Leavitt-Imblum  Ann Macbeth  May Morris  Charles Germain de Saint Aubin  Mary Elizabeth Turner   Teresa Wentzler  Erica Wilson  Lily Yeats

Organizations

and museums

Embroiderers’ Guild (UK)  Embroiderer’s Guild of America   Embroidery Software Protection Coalition  Royal School of Needlework   Chung Young Yang Embroidery Museum   Han Sang Soo Embroidery Museum

Related

Applique  Crochet  Knitting  Lace  Needlework  Quilting

Categories: English embroidery
About the Author

I am an expert from Cheap On Sales, usually analyzes all kind of industries situation, such as cast iron dutch oven cookware , aluminum casserole.

A Pictorial History of Honda’s Gold Wing Line


Superior Persian Tabriz Pictorial Rug Lapis Lazuli & Gold Rhyton of Capra, 5 BCE


Superior Persian Tabriz Pictorial Rug Lapis Lazuli & Gold Rhyton of Capra, 5 BCE


$6,998.00


Free Shipping 1 of A Kind Persian Caucasian Tabriz Pictorial gold Red rug 9x12


Free Shipping 1 of A Kind Persian Caucasian Tabriz Pictorial gold Red rug 9×12


$4,500.00


Real Antique solid Rose Gold PICTORIAL CAMEO BRACELET 8


Real Antique solid Rose Gold PICTORIAL CAMEO BRACELET 8″


$1,920.00


Unique Pictorial Art Deco Gold wall hanging Rug 2-7x5-2


Unique Pictorial Art Deco Gold wall hanging Rug 2-7×5-2


$1,200.00


Rare Wool Persian hand knotted Pictorial Abadeh Wall Hanging Birds Gold rug 3x5


Rare Wool Persian hand knotted Pictorial Abadeh Wall Hanging Birds Gold rug 3×5


$921.00


9ct GOLD ENAMEL FOB MEDAL PIGEON RACING VICTORIAN 1894 PICTORIAL


9ct GOLD ENAMEL FOB MEDAL PIGEON RACING VICTORIAN 1894 PICTORIAL


$347.75


9ct GOLD ENAMEL FOB MEDAL PIGEON RACING 1930.s PICTORIAL


9ct GOLD ENAMEL FOB MEDAL PIGEON RACING 1930.s PICTORIAL


$308.24


Vintage Vase's  Urn's French  Porcelain Pottery Swan Handles Pictorial Gold Trim


Vintage Vase’s Urn’s French Porcelain Pottery Swan Handles Pictorial Gold Trim


$225.00


1953 PICTORIAL HUMOR OF THE GOLD RUSH


1953 PICTORIAL HUMOR OF THE GOLD RUSH


$55.00


Baroque Pictorial Linen Pillow in Aqua Gold Coral with Fringe


Baroque Pictorial Linen Pillow in Aqua Gold Coral with Fringe


$55.00


Ghost Trails to California A Pictorial Journey from the Rockies to Gold Country


Ghost Trails to California A Pictorial Journey from the Rockies to Gold Country


$29.95


Gandhi: A Pictorial Biography NEW by Gerald Gold


Gandhi: A Pictorial Biography NEW by Gerald Gold


$29.56


~early print~Robert Browning's Poems hardback~pictorial cover~gold edges~


~early print~Robert Browning’s Poems hardback~pictorial cover~gold edges~


$25.99


Vintage 1957 T.L. Osborn's BLACK GOLD pictorial SHOCKING rare Africa Christian


Vintage 1957 T.L. Osborn’s BLACK GOLD pictorial SHOCKING rare Africa Christian


$25.00


100 years of blue & gold: A pictorial history of California football by Nick Pet


100 years of blue & gold: A pictorial history of California football by Nick Pet


$25.00


32 Antique Victorian Buttons Gold Luster on Glass Pictorial Metal Flowers Silver


32 Antique Victorian Buttons Gold Luster on Glass Pictorial Metal Flowers Silver


$24.95


Vintage Demi Tea Cup Saucer Italy Pictorial Capodimonte 22k Gold


Vintage Demi Tea Cup Saucer Italy Pictorial Capodimonte 22k Gold


$24.95


Gandhi: A Pictorial Biography NEW by Gerald Gold


Gandhi: A Pictorial Biography NEW by Gerald Gold


$21.06


1978 APM06770.1 EL DORADO COLUMBIAN GOLD Sydney 2000 Pictorial Postmark(2464.40)


1978 APM06770.1 EL DORADO COLUMBIAN GOLD Sydney 2000 Pictorial Postmark(2464.40)


$17.66


No 3051 PICTORIAL & PUZZLE Gold Medal Toys


No 3051 PICTORIAL & PUZZLE Gold Medal Toys


$16.99


Ghost Trails to California A Pictorial Journey from the Rockies to Gold Country


Ghost Trails to California A Pictorial Journey from the Rockies to Gold Country


$16.96


VINTAGE PIATNIK VIENNA Kingsbridge Pictorial 24KT. Gold Tipped Cards


VINTAGE PIATNIK VIENNA Kingsbridge Pictorial 24KT. Gold Tipped Cards


$15.99


Ghost Trails to California; A Pictorial Journey from the Rockies to the Gold...


Ghost Trails to California; A Pictorial Journey from the Rockies to the Gold…


$15.99


CZECH GLASS BUTTONS - Fairy Tale Froggy Pictorial Gold


CZECH GLASS BUTTONS – Fairy Tale Froggy Pictorial Gold


$14.99


OUR ALASKA Pictorial History Photos Towns Villages Miners Family Life Gold Rush


OUR ALASKA Pictorial History Photos Towns Villages Miners Family Life Gold Rush


$12.95


KLONDIKE GOLD RUSH A Pictorial History Alaska Yukon Prospecting Claims Mining


KLONDIKE GOLD RUSH A Pictorial History Alaska Yukon Prospecting Claims Mining


$12.95


The Gold Coast Book/Pictorial History by  Lang & Vader


The Gold Coast Book/Pictorial History by Lang & Vader


$12.00


A Pictorial History of the Klondike Gold Rush 1896-99


A Pictorial History of the Klondike Gold Rush 1896-99


$10.99


VTG OLD GOLD CIGARETTES AD 1930 Pictorial Review


VTG OLD GOLD CIGARETTES AD 1930 Pictorial Review


$10.36


Black Gold and Silver Sands: A Pictorial History of Agriculture in Palm Beach Co


Black Gold and Silver Sands: A Pictorial History of Agriculture in Palm Beach Co


$10.00


CLOTHWORKS CHRISTMAS SPIRIT DIANE KNOTT GOLD METALLIC PICTORIAL STRIPE BTY


CLOTHWORKS CHRISTMAS SPIRIT DIANE KNOTT GOLD METALLIC PICTORIAL STRIPE BTY


$9.99


Antique Pictorial History Mother Lode Gold Vol 1 Sierra Nevadas Vtg early 1900's


Antique Pictorial History Mother Lode Gold Vol 1 Sierra Nevadas Vtg early 1900’s


$9.99


GOLD COAST MARATHON MIAMI TO WEST PALM BEACH FLORIDA PICTORIAL MEDAL TOKEN


GOLD COAST MARATHON MIAMI TO WEST PALM BEACH FLORIDA PICTORIAL MEDAL TOKEN


$9.99


1983 PB The Mother Lode A Pictorial Guide to California’s Gold Rush Country


1983 PB The Mother Lode A Pictorial Guide to California’s Gold Rush Country


$9.99


Gold Rush Gateway Skagway Dyea Alaska Pictorial Book


Gold Rush Gateway Skagway Dyea Alaska Pictorial Book


$9.99


OUR ALASKA Pictorial History Photos Towns Villages Miners Family Life Gold Rush


OUR ALASKA Pictorial History Photos Towns Villages Miners Family Life Gold Rush


$9.98





“Gandhi – A Pictorial Biography” Gold & Attenborough


$9.43


THE STREETS WERE PAVED WITH GOLD~A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE KLONDIKE GOLD RUSH


THE STREETS WERE PAVED WITH GOLD~A PICTORIAL HISTORY OF THE KLONDIKE GOLD RUSH


$9.50


Railroad History, White Pass & Yukon Route Pictorial History, Gold Fields Map


Railroad History, White Pass & Yukon Route Pictorial History, Gold Fields Map


$8.99


Tibet Gold in Himalayas Harrison Forman 1950 pictorial


Tibet Gold in Himalayas Harrison Forman 1950 pictorial


$7.99


1970 APM03082.A-02 CAPTAIN COOK BULLI Pictorial Postmark (2809)GOLD Excelsior


1970 APM03082.A-02 CAPTAIN COOK BULLI Pictorial Postmark (2809)GOLD Excelsior


$7.40


VINTAGE PEACH LUSTERWARE DEMITASSE CUP AND SAUCER PICTORIAL AND GOLD DESIGN


VINTAGE PEACH LUSTERWARE DEMITASSE CUP AND SAUCER PICTORIAL AND GOLD DESIGN


$7.50


LC 177 SIEGEL #819 A European's large-Gold collection of 1869 pictorial issues


LC 177 SIEGEL #819 A European’s large-Gold collection of 1869 pictorial issues


$7.50


Streets Were Paved with Gold~Pictorial History of Klondike Gold Rush~1896-1899


Streets Were Paved with Gold~Pictorial History of Klondike Gold Rush~1896-1899


$6.97


Auburn California 1976 Medal Claude Chana Gold Discovery Pictorial 38mm (5m883)


Auburn California 1976 Medal Claude Chana Gold Discovery Pictorial 38mm (5m883)


$6.95


The Mother Lode: A Pictorial Guide to California's Gold Rush Country, Charles Mo


The Mother Lode: A Pictorial Guide to California’s Gold Rush Country, Charles Mo


$6.89


Slo-Mo-Shun IV Hydroplane Gold Cup Races 1953 vintage Pictorial


Slo-Mo-Shun IV Hydroplane Gold Cup Races 1953 vintage Pictorial


$6.49


Siegel 819 A European's Large-Gold Collection of 1869 Pictorial Issues Catalog


Siegel 819 A European’s Large-Gold Collection of 1869 Pictorial Issues Catalog


$6.39


Gold Cup Unlimited Hydroplane Racing 1961 Pictorial Wahoo/Thriftway /Hawaii Kai


Gold Cup Unlimited Hydroplane Racing 1961 Pictorial Wahoo/Thriftway /Hawaii Kai


$5.99


Gold Cup Hydroplane Racing 1957 Pictorial Slo-Mo-Shun /Thriftway /Hawaii Kai III


Gold Cup Hydroplane Racing 1957 Pictorial Slo-Mo-Shun /Thriftway /Hawaii Kai III


$5.99


1948 Indian Arrow & Gold Arrow Vintage pictorial


1948 Indian Arrow & Gold Arrow Vintage pictorial


$4.99


Our Goal Is Gold: A Pictorial Profile of the 1998 USA H


Our Goal Is Gold: A Pictorial Profile of the 1998 USA H


$4.48


PONY EXPRESS PICTORIAL CANCEL PTE Baseball GOLD Cachet


PONY EXPRESS PICTORIAL CANCEL PTE Baseball GOLD Cachet


$4.25


PARADISE CALIFORNIA Pictorial Cancel Gold Nugget Days


PARADISE CALIFORNIA Pictorial Cancel Gold Nugget Days


$4.25


Black Gold and Silver Sands: A Pictorial History of Agriculture in Palm Beach Co


Black Gold and Silver Sands: A Pictorial History of Agriculture in Palm Beach Co


$4.00


Vintage Pinback Button 1986 Pictorial Gold Nugget Days


Vintage Pinback Button 1986 Pictorial Gold Nugget Days


$3.99


Vintage Pinback Button 1986 PICTORIAL Gold Nugget Days


Vintage Pinback Button 1986 PICTORIAL Gold Nugget Days


$3.99


The Streets Were Paved With Gold: A Pictorial History of the      Klondike Gold


The Streets Were Paved With Gold: A Pictorial History of the Klondike Gold


$3.98


The Streets Were Paved With Gold: A Pictorial History of the      Klondike Gold


The Streets Were Paved With Gold: A Pictorial History of the Klondike Gold


$3.97


Gandhi: A Pictorial Biography by Gerald Gold, Richard A


Gandhi: A Pictorial Biography by Gerald Gold, Richard A


$3.95


Antique pc,Pictorial,Awl is not gold that glitters


Antique pc,Pictorial,Awl is not gold that glitters


$2.99


1981 The Gold Rush Ear FDC - Paddy Hannan Kalgoorlie Pictorial PMK


1981 The Gold Rush Ear FDC – Paddy Hannan Kalgoorlie Pictorial PMK


$2.96


1981 The Gold Rush Ear FDC - Ballarat Vic 3350  Pictorial PMK


1981 The Gold Rush Ear FDC – Ballarat Vic 3350 Pictorial PMK


$2.96


The Streets Were Paved With Gold: A Pictorial History o


The Streets Were Paved With Gold: A Pictorial History o


$2.42


1981 FDC0777 GOLD RUSH First Day Cover BEACONSFIELD TAS Pictorial Postmark 7251


1981 FDC0777 GOLD RUSH First Day Cover BEACONSFIELD TAS Pictorial Postmark 7251


$1.92


1981 FDC0777 GOLD RUSH First Day Cover CHARTERS TOWERS QLD 4820 Pictorial Pmark


1981 FDC0777 GOLD RUSH First Day Cover CHARTERS TOWERS QLD 4820 Pictorial Pmark


$1.92


AUSTRALIA 1981 Gold Rush Era 4v set on FDC - Mining - Beaconsfield Pictorial cxl


AUSTRALIA 1981 Gold Rush Era 4v set on FDC – Mining – Beaconsfield Pictorial cxl


$1.48


Our Goal Is Gold: A Pictorial Profile of the 1998 USA


Our Goal Is Gold: A Pictorial Profile of the 1998 USA


$0.99




The Streets Were Paved with Gold - The Klondike Gold Rush 1896-99


The Streets Were Paved with Gold – The Klondike Gold Rush 1896-99



57 MIN UNDATED VCR VIDEO fr PICT HISTORIES, MISSOULA, ORIGINAL 1890S FOOTAGE,…


Bundle Monster Laptop Notebook Skin Sticker Cover Art Decal - 12 14 15 - Fit HP Dell Asus Compaq - Phoenix


Bundle Monster Laptop Notebook Skin Sticker Cover Art Decal – 12 14 15 – Fit HP Dell Asus Compaq – Phoenix


$4.75


This design skin sticker fit most laptops & notebooks from 12 inch to 15 inch. Our skin covers a diagonal length of 17 inch. Dimension of our skin is 36cm (14.2 in) x 26.5cm (10.4 in); please measure your laptop prior purchase. Simple trimming instruction is included. Skins are made up of ultra thin and supreb vinyl material that is environmental friendly with an upscale leather-like finish to…

Garfield Potbelly of Gold: His 50th Book (Garfield New Collections)


Garfield Potbelly of Gold: His 50th Book (Garfield New Collections)


$7.24


The milestone 50th GARFIELD compilation book—with a SPECIAL EDITION ANIMATED COVER!The fat cat returns for his 50th book—a brand-new collection of hilarious strips, featuring Jon, Odie, and all the famous characters in the world of the one-and-only Garfield. Featuring a one-of-a-kind lenticular animated cover!…

Sebastião Salgado: Workers: An Archaeology of the Industrial Age


Sebastião Salgado: Workers: An Archaeology of the Industrial Age


$63.00


More than those of any other living photographer, Sebastião Salgado’s images of the world’s poor stand in tribute to the human condition. His transforming photographs bestow dignity on the most isolated and neglected, from famine-stricken refugees in the Sahel to the indigenous peoples of South America. Workers is a global epic that transcends mere imagery to become an affirmation of the enduring…

Space: Japanese Design Solutions for Compact Living


Space: Japanese Design Solutions for Compact Living


$16.00


Space is a photographic exploration of Japanese architecture and design in size-constricted areas, exploring imaginative, ingenious, and revolutionary solutions to space-compromised living. Masters in the art of managing small spaces, the Japanese in their design have given rise to a particular style of ingenuity.In their work, Japanese interior designers and architects constantly draw on cultural…


Share and Enjoy:
  • Add to favorites
  • Facebook
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Blogplay
  • MySpace

Write a comment: