OK, it's no longer Sunday anywhere on the planet, but I thought I'd just quickly share this with you as I haven't a suitable update on my stumpwork dragonfly. Basically, I made a mess of the first needlelace wing and couldn't quite get the hang of the body, so I put it on one side for a little while and got on with another baby cardy - this time for my dentist whose having a little girl very soon. The poor lady has had to put up with me a lot recently, and it's not over yet - I still have another treatment a week on Wednesday, so I thought I'd make a little something for her baby. Besides, I've rather missed knitting...
This won't be unfamiliar to anyone whose been reading my blog for a few months as it's the same pattern as I've already worked in white and pale green for another baby. I decided to work this one again as it was relatively quick and easy and, as I want to be able to hand it over when I have the next lot of treatment, speed was of the essence. What you see in the photo here was all done between Wednesday mid-afternoon and Sunday evening, although I don't think I got much done on Saturday. I did loads yesterday afternoon and evening - from finishing the first sleeve, through the whole of the second to almost completing the first of the fronts!
I plan to look for white flower buttons in town later on and to do some embroidery on it similar to the first, white set that I did a few months ago. This time I've plumped for the 3-6 month size as the other baby was so big at birth that the 0-3 month was already too small for her! She's now about 4-5 months and is well into 6-12 month clothes in width, if not in length. I've never seen such a fat baby!
Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013
A new stumpwork and a new venture
Recently I've been slowing working on the old DMC Dragonfly stumpwork kit. This is the last in the series (well, there was one more, a sunflower and caterpillar design, but I don't really like it, so never got it) and is half done. This kit was more complete than the last in that I have all the threads and beads I need this time, apart from a suitably coordinating yellow thread for the flower centre beads, but was still short one needle. The other shall we say 'irregularities' in this kit were that the printed design (over-thick lines as usual....) was a mirror image of the photo on the kit front and there were stems printed where there are none on the photo. For such a big and respected company, I think DMC have been a bit lacking in attention to some detail in some of these kits. But then, perhaps that's one the problems of being so big...
This first 'in progress' shot shows how the padded satin stitch is worked. First you fill in the shape a little smaller than you want the finished thing to be and working at right angles to the planned direction of the top stitches. After that, begin to layer the final satin stitch over the top. If you're working a pre-printed kit, or indeed any outline on fabric, remember to bring your needle up outside the line, not on it. If you do this you are sure of covering the line completely. If you bring your needle up on/through the line, then you will still see a good half of the line outside your shape. If there's another layer or line of stitches to be added, that's fine, but most of the time there isn't, so do take care to cover the line well.=)
Here are two shots of the completed surface work with a seed beaded flower centre. The colours are a little 'cool', pale and un-natural (except the flower and the deepest green) - I've never seen turquoise blue leaves before, but then, it is only a representation!=)
Next up is working the dragonfly to which I plan to make one or two changes in materials. More on that soon as I'll be taking plenty of photos during the process and, yes, there'll be a tutorial coming up for that. When? Depends how long the wings take as there are 4 needlelace wings to do and that might take a few sessions worth of work. Watch this space!
And now to something different....
What do two sections of an old printer packing box..
...a set of second hand dolls house bedroom furniture bought this week on e-bay...
...and an ironing board laden with laundered and nicely softened silk fabric pieces have in common?
They are part of my new venture, which is to open an Etsy shop selling handmade gifts and dolls house textiles within the next few months. I'm going to be doing some one of a kind, some limited edition (i.e. only 2 or 3 of that design will be made) and some repeatable designs of bedding, scatter cushions/pillows and maybe even curtains for dolls houses made out of really nice fabrics and inspired by the fashion bedding I've seen when we've visited home and DIY stores over the past few months. Other things I hope to include are some hand made purses/bags and maybe other things like bookmarks and so on.
I need to get a few things trialled and prototyped first and then make enough to stock a decent shop, so it won't be open for a couple of months yet, but I will tell you when it is. There will be a separate blog dedicated to what's going into the shop to start shortly before the shop opens and I'm madly borrowing library books talking about using social media for sales and working the handmade marketplace (I have to wait for the latter as someone else has beat me to them - sensible person!), so I'm trying to get all the quality, experienced information that I can before really getting going.
Something else I hope to add to the shop in time will be the embroidery kits and so on that I've been toying with the idea of doing for some time. I've decided against producing wholesale and doing trade fairs etc as that means a lot more work for less than half of the profit and I don't mind staying small. Far less pressure and I can, basically, take a break or even quit completely at any time I like without wholesale orders stacking up!=) In time, I hope to produce full kits, design and instruction packs and part kits containing the instructions and harder to source materials such as stumpwork wire, beads and pearl cottons and/or metallics. I'm also playing with the idea of materials only sets - coordinated colour materials packs that one can get creative with and use for one's own design ideas, maybe even with a few sketches and example pieces included in the blurb. So, I'll be doing some research on-blog later on in the year, all being well, so please get thinking about what you would like to see on the market and what you would need in terms of materials in a stumpwork kit - everything? Nothing? Or everything but the fabric and stranded cottons (like Victoria Sampler accessory packs)
So, tomorrow DH plans to cut those pieces of card for me to make my first mock-up dolls house room set. I'll be painting or papering the walls and adding in some things to make them look as realistic as I can. I don't actually own a dolls house, so I don't have access to one to use as a set, but we did have that miniature coffee service in our display cabinet.=) In the meantime, I'm trying to clear the decks of other projects and work, so have been doing such joyous things as mending and altering to get the pile down. Four out of six workbasket jobs done already.=)
More soon....
Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013
A sympathy card
My sister-in-law's father died from lung cancer recently, so I put together a small card for her. Above you can see the materials including the design transferred onto white silk and mounted into the working hoop, and below you can see the Anchor pattern I took the design from. It was originally a wedding ring cushion!
Below is the finished item (I took no WIP photos this time as it was a quick piece) with a few extras added in to 'pad it out' and the ribbon attached as well.
I'm part way through the last of my DMC stumpwork kits and will report on that soon.
Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013
Copyright, Pinterest, posting to facebook and so on
Today I've been thinking about copyright issues again and about how users interpret things differently and about how much these things are really worth the average blogger getting upset about.
Basically, contrary to popular opinion, things posted on the Web, although in the public domain are still the intellectual property of the poster and they still, as in the rest of the media world, hold full rights over how their work is distributed and published. Many people think that, just because it's technically very easy indeed to re-post someone else's work, that it's OK and legal to do so. It isn't. A re-poster doesn't have to claim it as one's own work in order for one using the material (say a photo) without permission to be a violation of copyright. The arguments that someone 'should be flattered', is getting 'free advertising' (quite irrelevant for most non-commercial purposes anyway) and 'shouldn't post their stuff if they don't want others to use it' are really just poor justifications and the last one makes about as much moral sense as saying that one shouldn't buy a picture and hang it in their own living room if they don't want their visitors to steal it!
However, I realise that, no matter how hard anyone tries, they're just not going to stop people using their material and one can tie oneself up in all sorts of knots and waste so much trying to assert copyright that it brought me to the point of thinking, 'If I grant general permission under, basically, non-commercial circumstances, then there will be nothing to get annoyed about. No-one will have ignored my wishes as I will have allowed them to do what they have done.' There are just so very many more important things to spend one's time and energy on. So, I've re-written my copyright page allowing folk to use my images on social networks, book-marking sites and discussion forums, as long as they provide credits and links. Yes, you can now 'pin' from here. People were managing to do so, regardless of the former 'nopin' tag anyway... As long as it's just a hobby-interest setting and you're not planning on making money, directly or indirectly, from the use of one of my photos, you can use it. Please don't re-publish tutorials, articles or anything like that though. Links are all that are needed to these things, as they are already in the public domain.
If there's any doubt about what you're interested in using my blog material for, check out the Copyright page and get in touch with me. I'm almost always going to say 'yes', although with commercial ventures, I may ask for something in return.
I'm just a medium skill embroideress with a moderately popular blog and getting all twisted up about who uses stuff without my permish is both a complete waste of time (as nine times out of ten you make no impact on them anyway when you protest) and just too unimportant an issue to dwell on. So, use away (within reason - I don't want to find, say, a blog post with a dozen or more of my photos featured!), but just remember to put my blog link and name on. I'll be interested to see how quickly images proliferate elsewhere now....=) I've set up my own boards now with only things from my own blog and from which people may repin.
Thanks and enjoy!=)
Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013
Basically, contrary to popular opinion, things posted on the Web, although in the public domain are still the intellectual property of the poster and they still, as in the rest of the media world, hold full rights over how their work is distributed and published. Many people think that, just because it's technically very easy indeed to re-post someone else's work, that it's OK and legal to do so. It isn't. A re-poster doesn't have to claim it as one's own work in order for one using the material (say a photo) without permission to be a violation of copyright. The arguments that someone 'should be flattered', is getting 'free advertising' (quite irrelevant for most non-commercial purposes anyway) and 'shouldn't post their stuff if they don't want others to use it' are really just poor justifications and the last one makes about as much moral sense as saying that one shouldn't buy a picture and hang it in their own living room if they don't want their visitors to steal it!
However, I realise that, no matter how hard anyone tries, they're just not going to stop people using their material and one can tie oneself up in all sorts of knots and waste so much trying to assert copyright that it brought me to the point of thinking, 'If I grant general permission under, basically, non-commercial circumstances, then there will be nothing to get annoyed about. No-one will have ignored my wishes as I will have allowed them to do what they have done.' There are just so very many more important things to spend one's time and energy on. So, I've re-written my copyright page allowing folk to use my images on social networks, book-marking sites and discussion forums, as long as they provide credits and links. Yes, you can now 'pin' from here. People were managing to do so, regardless of the former 'nopin' tag anyway... As long as it's just a hobby-interest setting and you're not planning on making money, directly or indirectly, from the use of one of my photos, you can use it. Please don't re-publish tutorials, articles or anything like that though. Links are all that are needed to these things, as they are already in the public domain.
If there's any doubt about what you're interested in using my blog material for, check out the Copyright page and get in touch with me. I'm almost always going to say 'yes', although with commercial ventures, I may ask for something in return.
I'm just a medium skill embroideress with a moderately popular blog and getting all twisted up about who uses stuff without my permish is both a complete waste of time (as nine times out of ten you make no impact on them anyway when you protest) and just too unimportant an issue to dwell on. So, use away (within reason - I don't want to find, say, a blog post with a dozen or more of my photos featured!), but just remember to put my blog link and name on. I'll be interested to see how quickly images proliferate elsewhere now....=) I've set up my own boards now with only things from my own blog and from which people may repin.
Thanks and enjoy!=)
Text and images © Elizabeth Braun 2013