Embroidery update Sunday, Dec 30 2007 

1. Semi-secret Twelfth Night gift for my lord
Almost done with embroidery, still need to assemble. I took a break on the embroidery last night and started a slip for #3, but I should really return to it tonight and finish the remaining bit.

2. Secret Twelfth Night gift for a friend
Not started, on account of me leaving important components in Colorado.

3. Slip #1 for pillow cover (I did it *facepalm*)
Started outlining. Must keep reminding myself that slips tend to look crappy at the outline stage. I’m thinking about starting to work one of the columbine flowers to reassure myself that it will not continue to look crappy despite my miscounting and compensation (drawn on the fabric would be less stressful than counting, I think, and more period. Next time).

4. Embroidered Westphalian bag for my lord (attempt #2 at a German pouch–#1 fell victim to Poor Project Planning)
Have assembled materials and chosen pattern.

5. Gloves (not quite an embroidery project)
Stalled at the assembly stage on account of hand sewing being dull and the constant shedding of the velveteen all over me being annoying. Also not a Twelfth Night gift, so lower on the priority list.

I am contemplating scarletwork collar and cuffs for a Spanish shirt, with pomegranates. Must finish off other projects first. Also, I have conceived the idea of making period clothes for my Anne of Green Gables doll, a realistic one who bears a striking resemblance (eye color and freckles aside) to the young Princess Elizabeth. I may be insane. But I think it would be interesting and also give me a chance to make the heavily embellished stuff I wouldn’t make full-scale. And perhaps an outfit for every decade, 1500-1600. And a Spanish gown.

Definitely insane. Focus on clothes and embroidery for me and full-sized real people first!

Gloves, or why I like embroidery better than sewing Tuesday, Dec 25 2007 

Glove update

1. Goldwork makes me frustrated; mine is very wobbly. I have decided to use pearls instead.
2. I don’t have enough of the gold lace I really like (which may be good, since it tends to snag and unravel), so I’ll have to buy more for the gloves. What should I do with the ~2 yards of fairly soft antique gold lace?
3. Sewing the cuffs is slow and tedious and reminds me that sewing is a chore I suffer in order to have period attire, while I actually like embroidery. Embroidery is also more portable. Usually.

Anyway, the gloves progress slowly and annoyingly. But I am sure I will manage to get them done by February, assuming I can go to Estrella this year.

Period writing (and lots of books)

I am getting better! And figuring out Elizabethan spelling, as well. I went to Powell’s yesterday and made a long list of books to order from the library (one in particular has beautiful photographs of a number of Elizabeth I’s letters, large enough to read!). I bought a little book about Tudor economics and my own copy of the works of Elizabeth I. There are a bunch of books on Bess of Hardwick that I need to read (and I want the 1601 inventory! and the new Hardwick Hall embroideries book, which I looked at the other day and which is well worth the $130 price tag).

If only there were books on daily life and textiles of 16th century Spain. I probably should have picked English for my second crack at a persona (14th century Mongol = easier to research!).

Project update 12/20 Friday, Dec 21 2007 

Green velveteen doublet

I cut out canvas interlining and added some boning. It should ideally be worn over a corset, and probably will be eventually (or passed on to someone smaller than I). I need to take out the shoulder seams and refit the back (I hope that will solve the problem).

15th century Italian chemise

Two movies and an episode of CSI:NY later (I time projects by what I’m watching), I am almost done with the embroidery for the cuffs. It’s a simple, narrow band of 16th century Italian cross-stitch (in the interest of time, short-armed) from the New Carolingian Modelbook. I couldn’t find anything definitively 15th century, but it’s a very simple design. And it still takes an hour an inch. Since I decided I want things embellished right, my concept of appropriate time to spend on an outfit has ballooned. I am not planning on making my own lace, however.

Spanish jerkin

I may hold off on patterning this until I have a corset, since I may want to be able to wear it as a doublet as well (with tie-on sleeves). But I think I have enough thread-wrapped buttons now.

Gloves

I am not yet tackling period gloves, but I bought a nice pair of red leather winter gloves when I am going to attach cuffs to. I’m not embroidering them to death in the satin stitch-and-buillion style that seems to be so common in the late 16th century, but I think my plan is plausible. I will make tabbed cuffs of black velveteen edged with gold lace, with a ruffle of red silk ribbon at the wrist (silk-and-gold ruffles seem to be common on extant pairs). The velveteen will be moderately embroidered with imitation Japan gold in a simple chevron-based pattern and I will sew gold spangles into the lace in lieu of making my own lace (haha). I think it’s a plausible second-best-pair style for lower nobility, particularly c. 1580 rather than later, and I will have something to keep my hands warm at night at Estrella.

The wonderful world of hats

I am pretty unsatisfied with my first attempt at a tall hat (such that I don’t think I’ll ever wear it again). I don’t have sufficient hair to keep a coif on without tons of pins, and I don’t feel stable in a feminine-size tall hat. So I will probably make a full-sized one, and this time I will use one of Lynn McMasters’ patterns. I also want an Italian bonnet, since they’re one of the few things worn with the Spanish doublet gowns I love that isn’t an elaborate hairstyle. And I need a new flat cap (or three) at some point. And a coif or two. I’m also intrigued by this portrait of Katherine Parr, in which she seems to be wearing a plain silk coif with the strings tied around a bun (per Laura Mellin’s theory), with the brim wired and edged with pearls, but not as sharply pointed in front as an “attifet” or a regular coif. The pleated material at the top might possibly be some form of forehead cloth. Anyway, I am intrigued by her hat, which looks like a brimless Tudor flat cap, like the kind men are always wearing in portraits a few decades earlier. But the portrait is from about 1545. I like the effect, though.

Pair of bodies

I have bumped the corset up on my to-do list; I really shouldn’t put it off any further. Sigh. I have pretty much all the materials (unless I decide to use reed instead of cable ties for the first attempt) and I will handsew everything with the blue silk thread I have leftover from another project. Need to decide what to use for the pretty outer layer (I have decided not to have a stereotypical white corset; I’d rather use that handkerchief linen for coifs and such).

In the meantime, corset-free Italian Ren is the next major sewing project.

Like I need more embroidery projects….

But I am temporarily sick of buttons, and embroidery is very portable. I am thinking a handkerchief will be a small project to experiment with reversible blackwork. Probably little Spanish pomegranate motifs in the corners. I really need to get over my love affair with English clothing sometime and do a few Spanish ensembles (a doublet gown, one of the fitted overgowns with doublet and forepart affairs that show up in Spanish and northern Italian paintings, a half bias-cut plaid cotehardie–no, really!–SOMETHING distinctively Spanish, anyway). But English embroidery is more interesting.