Date: Sunday f 20, 2012
Embroidery Laid Work Stitches
The necessity for something like what is called "Laid-work" is best shown by reference to satin-stitch. It was said in reference to it that satin-stitches should not be too long. There is a great deal of Eastern work in which surface satin-stitch, or its equivalent, floats so loosely upon the face of the stuff that it can only be described as flimsy.
Nothing could be more beautiful in its way than certain Soudanese embroidery, in which coloured floss in stitches an inch or more long lies glistening on the stuff without any interruption of threads to fasten it down.
Embroidery of this kind, however, hardly comes within the scope of practical work. Long, loose stitches want sewing down. Some compromise has to be made between art and beauty. The problem is to make the work strong enough without seriously disturbing its lustrous surface, and the solution of it is "laid-work," at which we arrive thus almost by necessity.
46. LAID-WORK SAMPLER.
It involves no new stitch, but is only another way of using stitches already described. In laid-work, long tresses of silk, as William Morris called them, floss by preference, are thrown backwards and forwards across the face of the stuff, only just piercing it at the edges of the forms, and back again. These silken tresses are then caught down and kept, I will not say close to the ground, but in their place upon it, by lines of stitching in the cross direction.
Laid-work is not, at the best, a very strong or lasting kind of embroidery (it needs to be carefully covered up even as it is worked), but by no other means is the silky beauty of coloured floss so perfectly set forth. It is hardly worth doing in anything but floss.
Laid-work lends itself also to gradation of colour within certain limits the limits, that is to say, of the straight parallel lines in which the silk is laid, the direction of these is determined often by the lines of sewing which are to cross them. In any case the direction of the threads is here more than ever important. The sewing down must take lines and may form patterns.
The sampler, Illustration 46, wants little or no explanation. It illustrates the various ways of laying. In the leaf the floss is sewn down with split-stitch, which forms the veining. Elsewhere it is kept in place by "couching," a process presently to be described. For the outlines, split-stitch and couching are employed.
The last row of laid work in the grounding is purposely pulled out of the straight by the couching in order to give a waved edge. The diaper which represents the seeding of the flower is not, properly speaking, laid-work, single threads of white purse silk are there couched down with dark.
47. JAPANESE LAID-WORK.
For the transverse stitching, for which also it is best to use floss, either split-stitch may be used, as in the leaf in the sampler, Illustration 46, or a thread may be laid across and sewn down couched, as it is called as in the flower. The closer the cross lines the stronger the work, but the less lustrous the effect.
Laid floss may be employed to glorify the entire surface of a linen material, as in the sampler or for the pattern only upon a ground worth showing, as in Illustrations 47, 48, 49.
Laid-work will not give anything like modelling, and it is not best suited to figure design except where it is quite flatly treated. It is effective when quite naively and simply used in cross lines which do not appear to take any account of the forms crossed as, for example, in Illustration 47, where the stitching does not pretend to express more than a flat surface.
The floss, however, is there carefully laid at a different angle of inclination in each petal, so as to give variety of colour. The lines of sewing vary according to the lines of the laid floss, but do not cross them at right angles. The important thing is, of course, that they should catch the laid "tresses" at intervals not too far apart. If the lines which sew down the floss have also to express drawing, as in the case of the bird's wings in Illustration 48, the underlying floss must be laid in lines which they will cross.
In the case of the leaves in the same piece of work, the floss is laid in the direction in which the leaf grows, and the stitching across, which sews it down, is slightly curved so as to suggest roundness in them.
48. INDO-PORTUGUESE LAID-WORK.
A more finished piece of work is shown in Illustration 49, where the laid floss crosses the forms, and the sewing down takes very much the place of veining in the flower, and of ribs in the scroll, expressing about as much modelling as can be expressed this way, and more, perhaps, than it is advisable often to attempt.
The sewing down asserts itself most, of course, when it is in a colour contrasting with the laid floss, as it does in the leaves in the smaller sampler overleaf.
The stitching down makes usually a pattern more or less conspicuous. On this same sampler it does so very deliberately in the case of the broad stalk. The rather sudden variation of the colour shown there in the leaves is harmless enough in bold work, to which the process is best suited.
One may be too careful in gradating the tints, timidity in this respect prevails too much among modern needlewomen, an artist in floss should not want her work to look like a gradated wash of colour. The Italians of the 16th and 17th centuries (see Illustration 49) were not afraid of rather abrupt transition in the shades of colour they used for laid-work.
49. ITALIAN LAID-WORK.
50. LAID SAMPLER.
When laid floss is kept in place by threads themselves sewn down across it, such threads are called "couched," and the work itself may be described as laid and couched. Hence arises some confusion between the two methods of work laying and couching. It saves confusion to make a sharp distinction between the two using the term "laid" only for stitches (floss) first loosely laid upon the surface of the stuff and then sewn down by cross lines of stitching of whatever kind, and "couched" for the sewing down of cords, (silk or gold), thread by thread or in pairs.
Laid floss is sewn down en masse, couched silk in single or double threads, and accordingly laid answers best for surface covering, couched for outlining, except in the case of gold, which even for surface covering is always couched.
Related Products And Free Videos
Hobbies Crafts Articles
Embroidery Interlacings Surface Stitches And Diapers
... that, of course, is a strong argument against it. All attempt to give separate names to diapers of this kind, whether worked upon the surface or into the stuff, is futile. They ought not even to be called stitches, being, in fact, neither more nor less than stitch patterns, to which there is no possible ...
Embroidery Tools A Word To The Worker
... actual outline of the embroidery when worked. Another way, more peculiarly adapted to needlework, is to trace the outline in ink upon fine tarlatan (leno muslin will do for very coarse work), and, having laid this down upon the stuff, to go over the lines again with a ruling pen and Indian ink or colour. ...
... conference between us. The description of the way the stitches are worked, and so forth, is my rendering of her description, supplemented by practical demonstration with the needle. She has primed me with technical information, and been always at hand to keep me from technical error. With reference to ...
... Muniment room at Ely, is an account of a gift to the church by Queen Emma, the wife of King Knut, who "on a certain day came to Ely in a boat, accompanied by his wife the Queen Emma, and the chief nobles of his kingdom." This royal present was "a purple cloth worked with gold and set with jewels for St. ...
Embroidery Buttonhole Stitches
... the bar and, slanting it towards the right, bring it out on a level with the other end of the bar somewhat to the right. This makes a triangle. With the point of your needle, pull the slanting thread out at the top, to form a square, insert the needle, slant it again to the right, draw it out as before, ...
... to a line which keeps step with the canvas, then there is a positive charm (for frank people at least) in the frank confession of the way the work is done. There are many degrees in the frankness with which this convention has been accepted, according perhaps to the coarseness of the canvas ground, perhaps ...
... that is not all the fault of the stitch, the worker is to blame. Indian embroiderers depart sometimes so far from mechanical precision as to shock the admirers of monotonously even work. Artistic use of chain stitch is made in many of our illustrations, for outlines, for surface covering in Mr. Crane's ...
... the plainer there, because the stitching is in a contrasting shade of colour. It is quite permissible to call attention to the stitching if it suits your artistic purpose. To disguise it by sewing through the cord is not a workmanlike practice. A worker should frankly accept a method of work and get character ...
... or two higher. At the back of the work (Illustration 12) the stitches lie in a slanting direction. To work wider Stem-Stitch (H). After the first two stitches, bring your needle out precisely above and in a line with them, and put it in again eighth of an inch in advance of the last stitch, producing ...
... and in the direction of the weft, it is as well not to run the returning row next to the one just done, but to leave space for a second course of darning afterwards between the open rows. The darning of the sampler, Illustration 43, is very simple. The flower is darned in stitches of fairly equal length, ...
Embroidery Direction Of The Stitch Stitches
... so perfectly rendered.
85. SATIN AND PLUMAGE STITCHES. The direction of the stitch is varied to some purpose in the head, where the flesh is all in straight upright stitches, whilst the hair is stitched in the direction of ...... Enthusiasm has a habit of outrunning reason. Because in some branches of industry subdivision of labour has been carried to absurd excess, it is the fashion to demand in all branches of it the autograph work of one person, which is no less absurd. To try and link together faculties which Nature has for ...
Embroidery Embroidery In Relief Stitching Stitch
... understitching. Raised work in white upon white is often used for purposes which make it inevitable that sooner or later the work will be washed. That is a consideration which the embroidress must not leave out of account. In any case, work over stitchery is more durable than over loose padding such as ...
Embroidery Embroidery Materials
... character, in which the forms of certain nondescript animals are at first sight puzzlingly prismatic in colour. They turn out to be roughly worked in short stitches of parti-coloured silk thread. The result is not altogether beautiful, but it is extremely suggestive. RIBBON. The effect of ribbon work ...
Embroidery Feather And Oriental Stitches
... the band.
The working of G G on feather-stitch sampler. Bands D, E, F, G, are variations of ordinary feather-stitch, requiring no further explanation than the back view of the work (26) affords. On the face of the sampler ...Embroidery Figure Embroidery Stitches
... two layers of silk (back and front) give a substance fairly thick but at the same time yielding, so that when the stitches for the mouth and eyes are sewn tightly over it they sink in, and, as it were, push up the floss between and give relief. The nose is worked in extra satin-stitch over the other, ...
Embroidery Herring Bone Stitches
... C, as may be seen by reference to the back of the sampler (opposite), though the short horizontal stitches there seen meet, instead of being wide apart as in the case of A.
The working of E on herring-bone sampler. What is known ...... dressed," he says, "the passers by look at them as at painted walls. Their clothes are pictures, which little children point out to one another. The saintlier sort wear likenesses of Christ, the Marriage of Galilee, and Lazarus raised from the dead." Allusion was made in a sermon, "Persons who arrayed ...
Embroidery Inlay Mosaic Cut Work Pattern Patternwork
... thus combining great simplicity of effect with wonderful minuteness of detail. They mask the joins with chain-stitch, the colour of it artfully chosen with regard to the two colours of the cloth it divides or joins. Further, they often patch together pieces of this kind of inlay. Inlay itself is a sort ...
Embroidery One Stitch Or Many Stitches
... danger of losing simplicity and breadth. The lace-like appearance of the needlework upon fine linen in Illustration 73, results chiefly from the extraordinary delicacy with which it is done, but it owes something also to the variety of stitch and of stitch-pattern employed in it. OUTLINE. The use of outline ...
Embroidery Plea For Simplicity
... to-day that there are some kinds of needlework we admire, which yet are not worth our doing, such, for example, as the all-over work, which does not amount to more than simple diaper, and which really is not so much embroidering on a textile as converting it into one of another kind. Glorified instances ...
Embroidery Quilting Stitches Stitching
... of stuff do not lie close except where they are held together by the stitching, and a very pleasantly uneven surface results. This effect is enhanced if between the two stuffs there is a layer of something soft. If, now, you keep down the groundwork of your design by comparatively frequent stitches diapering ...
Embroidery Rope And Knot Stitches
... out, slant it towards you, and bring it out again a little in advance of where it came out before, and just below the thread held under your thumb. Draw the thread through, and there results a stitch which looks rather like a distorted chain stitch (B). The next step is to make another similar stitch ...
Embroidery Satin Stitch And Its Offshoots
... with short, straight strokes of the needle, just as a pen draughtsman lays side by side the strokes of his pen, but, as she cannot, of course, leave off her stroke as the penman does, she has perforce to bring back the thread on the under side of the stuff, so that, if very carefully done, the work is ...
... they necessarily alternate or dovetail. If the form to be worked necessitates radiation in the stitching, there results a texture something like the feathering of a bird's breast, whence the name plumage-stitch, another term describing not so much a stitch as the use of a stitch. No matter what the stitch, ...
... worked at night while its owner was resting, saving her all personal responsibility about her mending. When the old lady finally died, another owner claimed this charmed needle, and began at once to test its powers. But, do what she would, she was unable to force a thread through its obstinate eye. At ...
Embroidery Stitch Groups Stitches
... stitches might be grouped, according to the order of time in which historically they came into use, according as they are worked through and through the stuff or lie mostly on its surface, according as they are conveniently worked in the hand or necessitate the use of a frame, and in other ways too many ...
... their vessels with such goods as they wanted. Costly silken robes of the brightest colours are manufactured in Almeria." Granada was famous too, a little later, for its silks and woven goods. About 1562 Navagiero wrote, "All sorts of cloth and silks are made there, the silks made at Granada are much esteemed ...
... subjects introduced are strange. It displays scenes from the life of St. Ubaldo, with some incidents also in that of St. Julian Hospitaler. St. Ubaldo is seen forgiving a mason who, having run a wall across his private grounds, had knocked the saint down for remonstrating. Another scene shows the death ...
... owe its origin to this bit of monastic enterprise in 550. Silk garments were very costly, however, and it was not every lady in early times who could have such luxuries. It is said that even the Emperor Aurelian refused his wife her request for just one single cloak of silk, saying, "No, I could never ...