Cushion with monogram M, leaves and feathers

Cushion with monogram M, leaves and feathers (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

Cushion with monogram M, leaves and feathers (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

Daughter No 2 asked me to make and embroidered cushion for a colleague in her office in Vietnam where she is country director for MAG . I add this link to those of you not familiar with my blog as it is a laudable non-governmental organisation doing a fantastic job clearing landmines from areas of conflict throughout the world. MAG, the acronym for Mines Advisory Group, is also active in the training and subsequent employment of  local people to work alongside their experienced technical teams with the aim in the end of  these local employees taking over the work for themselves. I was going to apologise for boring those who may have read about this on my blog before but then I thought that that was taking politeness a step too far and that few would begrudge me giving a little bit of blog space to so worthy a cause. Lecture over.

Embroidered feather ( or is it a frond), hand embroidered on cushion with monogram M

Embroidered feather ( or is it a frond), hand embroidered on cushion with monogram M

A short deadline for getting this cushion finished and lots going on in other bits of my life meant that I didn’t have much thinking time to fiddle around with a design, so I rather threw myself into sketching the frondy, feathery plumes directly onto the linen wherever the needle took me, using just simple back stitches and french knots. The leaves and the M are in satin stitch. For the first time I decided to try grey on white and DMC 762 provided just the effect I wanted – quite silvery and not far from white, without any greenish tinge which so many greys have.

Embroidered feather/frond; hand embroidered on cushion with monogram M

Embroidered feather/frond; hand embroidered on cushion with monogram M

Well, I finished the embroidery in good time but making up the cushion got side-tracked by family life. I’ve learned not to hurry any part of creative manufacture and fortunately my daughter’s Manchester-based line manager will be going out to Vietnam in a couple of weeks’ time, so the finished cushion will be hitching a lift with him. (Last time, he had to take wadding for a quilt – well only a baby’s quilt, so not too bulky and I think the office have got used to being haberdashery couriers by now.)

Embroidered feather (hand embroidered on cushion with monogram M

Embroidered feather (hand embroidered on cushion with monogram M

Now I have a bit more time at my disposal, I’m wondering whether to make this into a little round cushion and daughter No 2 then started to get excited about filling it with lavender. Mother-of-pearl buttons are apparently non negotiable essentials (particularly as she scoured all the markets in Hanoi for them to bring home to me and I now have several plump bags of pearly swag crying out to be used), so no short cuts in that direction. I have no spare time until the weekend, I  shall blog a picture of the finished item then.

Hand embroidered  cushion: detail of  monogram M

Hand embroidered cushion: detail of monogram M

 

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Goldwork embroidered bible in Balliol Library

Goldwork embroidered bible in Balliol Library. Hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone in memory of her husband Kenneth Roy Johnstone and given to the library in 1978

Goldwork embroidered bible in Balliol Library. Hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone in memory of her husband Kenneth Roy Johnstone and given to the library in 1978. Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

Literally a labour of love, the binding of this bible was hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone in memory of her husband, Kenneth Roy Johnstone (Balliol 1921). It was given to the college in 1978. I had worked in the college library for some years before I was shown this beautiful piece and since then I have longed for it to be more widely seen and by those who would appreciate its workmanship. As the box the bible is kept in comes with a warning about too much exposure to light, some sort of permanent display is not very likely (although similarly embroidered altar frontals seem to cope with being heaved on and off altars and suffer vast quantities of light exposure, not to mention candle grease, damp and enquiring fingers). Hoorah for the blog post, therefore, as it is the perfect vehicle for getting something so lovely visible to a wider audience.

Embroidered bible in Balliol library: back cover.(Hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone in memory of her husband).

Embroidered bible in Balliol library: back cover.(Hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone in memory of her husband). Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College’

Last year the bible was brought out and shown to a group of international designer bookbinders who visited Balliol Archives at St Cross during a day’s tour of college libraries (blogged about here by the archivist).

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone).

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone). Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

I think the design must be Mrs Johnstone’s own, especially as the the medium she chose – goldwork – is not really the sort of thing you find off the peg designs for.  Drawing on rich historical precedents, the work is particularly appropriate for a Bible as  brings to mind English embroidery at its apogee.

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone). Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

In the Middle Ages Opus Anglicanum became famous and sought after throughout Europe, primarily for ecclesiastical use. A Vatican inventory of 1295 lists over 100 items of English embroidery – at this time embroidery was regarded as high art, up there on a par in value and skill alongside painting and goldwork. (For a history of how embroidery descended from the dizzy heights of  fine art to being marginalised as just women’s work, read Rozsika Parker’s mind boggling, jaw dropping, read-it-till-your-head-hurts, glorious book, The Subversive Stitch. I have just had a panic as I couldn’t find my copy anywhere – and where was it? In my bedside pile, where it should be for regular revisiting. Phew.)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone). Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

Opus Anglicanum was at its very best from the mid-C13 to mid-C14, after which there was a decline in skill and quality as competition came from European workshops and fashions in textiles changed. Italian weavers produced fine brocades and velvets which became the vogue and could be produced more cheaply (comparatively, they were still expensive luxury goods) and more quickly. English embroiderers responded by producing simpler designs with more appliqué work instead of the time consuming practice of filling in designs with stitches. Bands of appliqué were often applied to the new Italian fabric as a way of getting the best of both worlds. However, it is generally agreed that the heart had gone out of English ecclesiastical embroidery and that the zest and verve of embroidered decoration only really returned under the Tudors but this time in a secular context, to adorn palaces and the court.

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone.) Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

It was not until the C19 that goldwork became fashionable for church use once more with the reforming Oxford movement and under Gothic Revival architects like Pugin and Butterfield (both submitted designs for a new chapel for Balliol; Butterfield was chosen. The college still has Pugin’s designs.) This genre of altar furnishings rumbled on through the early C20 and is still seen on many altars today. Our church in North Stoke has a fine set of gold embroidered altar frontals dating from the early C20th which are still looking good in spite being in need of repair once again.

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of front (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone). Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

Surprisingly, ornate ecclesiastical goldwork was making a quiet comeback during the 1960s while the rest of us were making shift dresses out of next to nothing, jangling with plastic bangles and starting to dip into Laura Ashley’s country chic. Beryl Dean opted for strong designs with clean lines and wasn’t afraid to be the embroiderer’s John Piper.

 

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of back (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of back (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone). Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

But at the root of her sometimes challenging designs was superb skill with the needle, including the difficult or nué (shaded gold) technique in which gold threads, laid over the whole of the embroidery, are couched with different coloured thread. (Pauline has done something similar here although I’m not sure technically whether the term is preferentially used to describe larger areas like that of clothing, or the face where the skill of the embroiderer has to be great to suggest contours of fabric or skin.)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of back (hand embroidered by  Pauline Johnstone)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of back (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone). Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

Pauline’s designs for the front and back covers are agreeably contrasting. On the front, the sturdy gold cross is softened by the entwined stems and stylised flowers, whilst on the back nature has taken over to sing its own praise to God. Flowers and leaves are embellished with more subtle couching in which coloured silk threads predominate over the gold. Beads, used sparingly, draw attention to details in the design, their ability to catch the light reminding us of the spark of life in the flora and fauna. On the back cover the design includes scrolling foliage on which sits a  garden bird of the utmost charm whose open beak visibly sings Deo gratias  (Thanks be to God); below a butterfly contemplates sharing the sentiment. Both design and embroidery are of the highest standard. 

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of back (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone)

Embroidered goldwork bible in Balliol Library: detail of back (hand embroidered by Pauline Johnstone). Image published with the permission of the Master and Fellows of Balliol College.

Apology: I have taken many photographs of this book – some a year ago and others more recently (in daylight- but not outside/with a lamp/with flash/without flash, etc., etc.) but I have been unable to maintain a consistent colour for red silk of the background. The colour is somewhere between the pinkish-red of the first 7 photographs and the  browny-red of the last 2. The 3rd picture from the end is something else again but I wanted to show how each leaflet had been treated differently with that particular photograph. I hope Pauline’s skill has shone through my technical shortcomings.

 

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