Little house patchwork quilt

Little house patchwork quilt

Rows of little near identical houses strike chords of dread in our modern materialistic souls, yet place a string of the same, fabric on fabric, and suddenly the image summons up feelings of cosiness and security. Context is everything and symbols have a condensed meaning which is sometimes difficult to see in the  complexity of the real thing. I had relatives who lived in a coal mining village in the Rhondda in South Wales. I only ever visited them twice. The first time I was very small. The village itself had no visible identity apart from the mine paraphernalia – wooden towers topped with ever turning wheels operated the  lifting equipment, while on the flat rails etched the ground for the trucks to carry coal and spoil away. I next visited some 20 years later and all industry had been cleared away completely. The valley bottom was returned to green – indeed you could see you were in a valley which you wouldn’t have guessed before. But the strangest thing was the little rows of terraced houses strung along both sides of the valley, half way up, as if sitting ready for some great and long drawn out contest about to take place on the lush green pitch below. Beauty has returned to the valleys of South Wales, but beauty at a price for now there are no jobs. No miner ever wanted their own sons to follow them down the mines. Today many wish they even had that choice.

Liberty print patchwork house

This quilt belongs to daughter Number 2 who had it on the wall over her bed. From the above photo you can see not all whites are white as I used whatever could be found. I remember fighting with myself over this as a large part of me found the slightly different whites too imperfect. But I made myself do it and then realised that slight variations broke up the quilt in an interesting way The ragged pink stripe fabric was one of those fabrics we loved and I jealously guarded pieces of  it until the last few bits went into hexagons for a quilt I made into a curtain. The green was Designers Guild (‘peaweed’, I think) which was useful for being as near to plain as a pattern could be.

The whole quilt was hand pieced over papers and then hand quilted as you see above. All fabrics were medium weight cottons, except for the Designers Guild fabric you can just see above which was almost too thick for the needle to get through because of the way it was printed. As it was always going to be hung on the wall, I used plain white sheeting for the reverse.

Little house quilt: reverse showing detail of quilting

 

Patchwork quilts decorating wedding reception
Left: Little House
Right : Ship quilt

 

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Framed whitework monogram wedding presents

This season of plentiful rain, morning mists and dramatic slanting shadows of a low afternoon sun has tried my photography skills far beyond my capability. And it’s not only me that is found wanting. The field you see above has not done well either for the oil seed rape that was growing in it has made poor progress. The earth has been turned over   and left to lie fallow until the spring. Last week birds, very aptly, had a field day. Big black flocks of rooks swarmed over one part, seagulls pock-marked another, while the glorious red kites appeared in waves of 30 or more, swooping low in familiar fashion but also, more unusually, landing on the earth and spending minutes at a time feeding on the morsels of protein revealed in the newly upturned soil. The red kites, like kittens, are great time stealers. Pause by a window, catch sight of the russet and white 5 foot of wingspan weaving across the sky and you see why native Americans, in awe of the splendour of such wonderful birds, wanted to deck themselves out similarly. Their behaviour has been very peculiar for they very rarely settle on the fields in such large numbers, preferring to do exhibition flying, the kite equivalent of the Farnborough Air Show.

Wedding monograms: on the left ED; on the right CB

But back to some embroidery. I finished these monograms a couple of weeks ago and have tried – on an almost daily basis – to photograph them. I’ve had a go at putting them on window sills, on the ironing board on its last notch on front of the window and on Heath Robinson arrangement of boxes on top of small tables which themselves are balanced on top of piles of books – almost anything to catch a bit of natural light. Any sign of a bit of sunlight during the daytime when I wasn’t at work saw me shooting out into the garden armed with camera, cloths to cover wet tables and the embroidered panels. As you will see the results have been variable. White on white is very difficult.  The above were taken in the shade of an arbour on a board balanced between 2 director’s chairs. They could do with a bit more contrast, but  it’s 1am and we’re off to Rome for a week in 4 hours time, so they will have to do.

The embroideries were made as wedding presents for 2 sisters, one of whom was married in June 2011 and the other in May 2012. Each has the initial of the husband’s and wife’s christian name entwined together.As I was late in delivering the first, I though I’d wait until both were finished, so I hope  they’ll get them sometime before this Christmas, but as I say, we’re off to Rome.

Monogram: CB

CB is entwined with honeysuckle

Mongram:CB detail

 

Mongram: CB detail

 

Mongram: CB detail

 

Monogram: ED

ED has rambling roses

 

Mongram: ED detail

 

Monogram:ED detail

 

Monogram: ED detail

 

Monogram; ED detail

I was going to make the embroidered monograms into cushions as I have done before, but I found these lovely oak box frames which had plenty of space between the glass and the embroidery and, as embroidered linen is not so easy to care for, thought framing would be better. I’m very pleased with the result, and so is daughter no 1 who has now asked for her wedding to be commemorated in this way. I must buy some more frames before they get discontinued.

Sorry for garbled prose, infelicitous phrasing and unnoticed spelling mistakes, but Rome is calling and I must respond.

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