This is the front of the worked piece showing the variety of green threads used including:
perle cotton various thicknesses, Rajmahal Art Silk (viscose), Madeira rayon sewing thread, Anchor pearl cotton 8 multicolour, from 2 to 6 stranded cotton embroidery thread (a la Anchor/DMC), DMC cotton perle 12, fun slub thread, ordinary wool, Anchor fil a broder cotton, fun pack variety bought at an exhibition.
The stitch was varied slightly here and there i.e. not reversed in some instances and in others it was overstitched with a thin contrast thread to embellish.
The back of the piece:
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Shapes and Voids
Photo, (reversed) shapes and colours.
Tracing and coloured result showing plaster stripes and lichen blobs.
Good starter for a random patchwork project.
This negative rubbing reminded me of cracked leather - perhaps another project with the backing material being cracked leather and covered with embroidery.
Colours
Oil Pastel Rubbings
The Wall
Three pictures of two different walls at a nearby church. The first is a plaster and lichen affair, good for wax rubbings, giving a criss-cross pattern. The second is a random patchwork affair and gives a pleasing 'void' shape (see next post). The final wall is the most colourful: plenty of green, yellow, white, mushroom brown and greys (light grey and slate grey/almost blue).
Stitches suggested are:
1st picture - good old cross stitch although norwich stitch could be used in adjoining blocks.
2nd picture - perhaps a rhodes stitch for the 'patches' and a tent stitch for the mortar.
3rd picture - using only one stitch, I think a cushion stitch could be used to shade the shapes or painted canvas and needleweaving to suggest either the shapes or the moss.
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