Sunday, December 18, 2011

Pre-holiday bustle continues here at String Central. Cookies have been baked, cakes marinated, menus planned, the tree obtained (it will be decorated this coming Saturday), candles and chocolate coins obtained, presents squirreled away awaiting wrapping and distribution. You know the drill, or live it vicariously through others.

Speaking of presents - here's one. I was charmed by the stitchable iPhone cases available for both the latest and last model phones. I don't have an iPhone, but that didn't stop me from grasping the fun of such a thing. So I took three of the Ensamplario Atlantio patterns and fitted them to the case dimensions and stitch count. One caution - I did these the week that the iPhone 4 was released, and all three patterns are based on the stitch count for the earlier model's case. I would suggest if you're stitching for a newer phone that you start in the middle of the design, aligning it to the center of the case, and work out from there; rather than starting at one end or the other.

If you click on the image above, you'll get a full page size JPG to print and stitch for the iPhone fiend in your life. (Google iPhone Case Cross Stitch to find one of the many retailers who carry the plastic pre-punched cases.)

Enjoy!

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Sunday, December 18, 2011 4:35:06 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Saturday, September 03, 2011

It's my fault for directing all input to an alternate mailbox instead of my main address, mostly to avoid spam. Another great pattern got away from me in the cross-inbox shuffle.

I present our collection, now an even 40 patterns!

Where's the one that went missing? Just below flower #5, now moved to the top row of half-diamonds you will see:

  • 40 - Beetle, from Alexandra Rule, who responded to my call for more insects last week with this beauty!

Groveling apologies to her for letting her beetle crawl off through inattention and sloth. And thanks to Anonymous, who graciously consented to let her symmetrical pattern be moved to an edge diamond, to make room for Alexandra's design.

That should be all of them. I've scoured my inboxes now, including my spam filter folders. If there are any more out there that haven't been posted, please let me know. And if there's interest in another crowd-sourced project - also please let me know. I'd be happy to collect/collate, provided folk still trust me not to lose input.

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Saturday, September 03, 2011 3:34:20 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 

Taa daah! I present our finished crowdsource pattern page! 39 different and distinct patterns, from Twerp's Starbee to Pam's Knot, designed by you - readers of String!

To round out our count we have:

  • 32 - Gum Blossom #1. From Susan Davis, posting all the way from Australia
  • 33 - Death's Head. Susan continues our piratical sub-theme. The eye patch and nose are done off-count.
  • 34 - Doodle. Also Susan's. The tightly packed stitches at the arms' ends will present like satin stitch.
  • 35 - Gum Blossom #2. Susan again, sharing flowers from Oz with the rest of us.
  • 36 - Gum Blossom #3. More Susan. Very sweet!
  • 37 - Gum Blossom #4. Susan's final flower.
  • 38 - Snails. Mine. I can't resist working these snails into every project I can. Your initials can be swapped into the center oval instead of the flowers.
  • 39 - Celtic Knot. Last but far from least, from Pam, who ties our totally insane collection up with a nice, final knot.

So there you have it - one full page of crowdsourced contributions. This was fun! If folks want, I'll start another of these. Let me know. Also if you stitch up something using one or more of these fillings, please send me a picture to post here, so we can all share the joy.

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Saturday, September 03, 2011 12:31:59 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Sunday, August 21, 2011

Although it is in the periodic nature of comets to come and go, I owe apologies to The Person Who Wishes to Remain Anonymous for inadvertently omitting her tribute to the Bayeux Tapestry from the crowdsource project updates. The inbox management blunder that made that mistake has been taken out and shot.

This week brought five additions to the project, including the belated comet:

  • 27. Comet - a tribute to Halley's Comet as it appeared in the Bayeux Tapestry - Anonymous (with apologies!)
  • 28. Mesmer-Flower - A mind bending cross-style flower from from Alexandra Rule
  • 29. Anchor - A continuation of our maritime sub-theme also from Alexandra Rule
  • 30. Bumblebee - We need more insects if we want to pay homage to the spirit of historical era stitching. This one is from Laura Kathleen Brashear.
  • 31. Strawberry - Another for the traditional motif sub-theme, again from Laura Kathleen Brashear.

I'm having way too much fun with these. You can see that we've still got room for eight more full-diamond designs, and for about five more that are symmetrical and that can be represented in the half-diamond boxes at top and bottom.

With some overlap among categories, our sub-themes so far seem to be piratical/nautical (1, 16, 20, 21, 3, 29), science fiction (26, 23, 24, 11), sweetness-and-light (31, 22, 6, 10, 18, 13, 4), traditional (31, 30, 26, 5, 6, 3, 25, 13, 7, 16, 9, 12, 14, 10, 12), astronomic (27, 20, 31, 11), beasties-and-bugs (30, 19, 16, 6, 17, 3, 2, 16), and floral-fruits (26, 5, 25, 13, 7, 9, 12, 14, 10, 8). This leaves poor ennui (15) sitting in the corner and sulking, unless you think that by virtue of "Meh" being a popular Think-Geek t-shirt, he belongs in with SF.

If anyone has started stitching something using these, I'd love to hear about it.

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Sunday, August 21, 2011 7:52:42 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Tuesday, August 16, 2011

First, thanks this week to our crowdsource design contributors - the patient Jane Wyant, and (as always) Long Time Needlework Pal Kathryn Goodwyn:

  • #25 - Grapes - Kathryn's own needlework sigil, offered up to our collection. (Kathryn's deep love of grape motifs is legendary).
  • #26 - TARDIS - From Jane Wyant, a Whovian tiny inter-dimensional call box should we wish to stitch in two places at the same time.

We've still got a few open diamonds. With some repositioning I think I can fit in seven more motifs. Feel free to send yours along.

On my own blackwork sampler, progress is being made. My Lipperheide panel is proceeding apace.

I am not going to have room for the entire repeat. There's a head of one of the four winds (possibly Boreas), and a horn tooting satyr that will have to wait their turn on a future piece. Unless Kathryn gets there first. :)

After I finish out this strip to the left hand edge of the stitched area I will fill in a narrower band below the sprigged chimney pots. Then I'll edge across the entire bottom with something nice and dark - probably worked voided style. I haven't picked out the designs for either of those strips yet, but as folk following here know, I enjoy bungee jump style stitching. Once the dark area is done that will leave only the top. Believe it or not, the part you see stitched here is only about 65% of my total piece. I'm not sure what I'll do up there, but that's still down the road.

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Monday, August 15, 2011 11:21:02 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Sunday, July 31, 2011

A few more submissions this week. It's not too late if you want to play along!

All of these are from anonymous donors.

#20 - A very aggressive sun.

#21 - A mustachioed moon.

#22 - A spiral mint candy.

#23 - Tiny robot!

#24 - Frankenstein's Monster/

The sun, moon, robot and monster are from someone who doodled these up on the floor of a recent science fiction/comics convention that shall also remain nameless. The candy comes from someone who was charmed by the ladybugs, unicorn and the bunny, and was inspired to continue the counter theme of sweetness and light. (As opposed to poison, pirates, and ennui).

I welcome more input - traditional flowers, non-specific geometrics, animal, vegetable, domestic, wild, fantasy or reality.

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Saturday, July 30, 2011 11:28:36 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Friday, July 22, 2011

Designs for the crowdsource blackwork project continue to trickle in. All are welcome! I won't close out until the stream stops.

Here you see last week's all-pattern page, augmented with the new submissions:

Credits for numbers 1-16 are in last week's posting.

17. Bunny - from Laura Kathleen Brashear

18. Peacock - Also from Laura Kathleen Brashear

19. Sparkle Unicorn Pony - Yes, there's a 13-year old living in this household who when asked, "What would you like to see me draw" came up with the obvious.

crowd.jpg

If you want to play along at home, copy the blank square above and edit it in any graphics program, or do like these folk have done - print it out, draw on it, and send me a scan or a photo ( kbsalazar (at) gmail (dot) com). I'll graph up the final and include it on the master chart.

By the way, don't miss clicking on Laura's name. She's got a nifty series at her blog, redacting geometric embroidery patterns from a set of Russian language ethnographic arts photo plates from before 1900, currently on digital display at the New York Public Library's on line site. I've been eying those for a while because some of them have roots in my favorite age of embroidery. Thanks for supporting the crowdsource project, Laura!

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Friday, July 22, 2011 12:56:54 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Saturday, July 16, 2011

Thank you all! As you can see, our crowdsourced blackwork pattern page is starting to fill up:

I've made no attempt to balance these or place them in any particular way. Numbering starts in the center, and works (more or less) in order of receipt. Half stitches, and stitches off the grid are shown in red. I've also taken the liberty of naming these, and including comments if provided by the donors. So we have:

  1. Death's head - mine, fromDancing Pirate Octopodes
  2. Octopus - also mine, from Dancing Pirate Octopodes
  3. StarBee - sent in by the fabulous Twerp, our first submisison!
  4. A Cup of Tea - from Sandy
  5. Crosshatched Flower - from Anonymous
  6. Ladybugs - from #5 Anonymous' 10-year old daughter
  7. Shaded Flower- from the prolific Jeannette de Beauvoir
  8. Geometric - "It starated life as a flower, I don't know what it is now..." - from Jeannette de Beauvoir
  9. Acorn Sprig - "The acorn looks a bit big but a smaller one was too small." - Jeannette de Beauvoir (I think the size is just fine).
  10. Pomegranate - Jeannette de Beauvoir is on a roll!
  11. Zap! - :"Kind of reminds me of a circuit diagram." - another from Jeannette de Beauvoir
  12. Flower Sprig - Jeannette de Beauvoir again.
  13. Four Flowers - Jeannette de Beauvoir
  14. Mistletoe - "I think this could stand to be moved down a space or two in the frame" - Jeannette de Beauvoir
  15. Meh. - This one came in earlier but fell to #15 due to lack of enthusiasm :) - Another (totally different) anonymous donor
  16. Blue Crab - "To continue your ocean theme." - from Maryland Stitcher, who managed to fit in the requisite number of legs!

I'll release the whole page as a well-behaved PDF as soon as it's full. It's not too late to add your patterns to our pile. I'm more than happy to finish out this page, and to start more pages if needed. The instructions are here.

And if you landed on this page looking for Ensamplario Atlantio my free book of blackwork fillings - do not despair. You can find it here.

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Saturday, July 16, 2011 6:51:43 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Monday, July 11, 2011

Patterns for the Crowdsource Blackwork Pattern project continue to trickle in.

Sandy (no link) sends a cup of morning tea.

And a family wishing to remain anonymous sends a flower (from the mom) and ladybugs (from the 10-year old daughter):

This anonymous donor was inspired enough to register his or her lack of enthusiasm:

Got an idea - simple, elaborate, silly, or serious? Here's the blank frame again:

crowd.jpg

Copy it local and edit it in any graphics program, or do like these folk did - print it out, draw on it, and send me a scan or a photo ( kbsalazar (at) gmail (dot) com). I'll graph up the final. When we have a pile, I'll compose them all together into a page or two of patterns and post them back here.

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Monday, July 11, 2011 5:05:33 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 

Back from vacation! A week of Cape Cod sun, sand, salt water and doing as little as possible except enjoying those things.

This year my mom came with us and we had a great time. We spent most of our time on the sands right at our hotel, sitting, swimming, kayaking, even watching Provincetown fireworks from our room's deck. We did our now traditional beach paella, salmon teriyaki on the grill, and flank steak kabobs. I am rested but could be easily persuaded to do a wash-rinse-repeat of the whole week's experience. Seven days is not enough.

Arriving back home, I checked gMail to see if anyone had volunteered a graphed pattern for the crowdsource project. Lo and behold! There was one:

Crowd-Twerp.jpg

I present Design #1 - Twerp's StarBee. The first design in the series. Red lines indicate straight lines "off the grid" or not at 180/90/45-degree angles. I like this cheeky little fellow. A nice one, Twerp!

If you want to draw up one of your own to be posted here, please feel free to download the JPG at the project's kickoff page, then draw on it by hand or using any graphics program. You can email the resulting file, a photo or a scan of your design to me at kbsalazar (at) gmail (dot) com. Let me know whether or not you want your name or a link posted with your offering. I do reserve the right to do light editorial selection (this is a family-rated website).

Now, what progress have I made on my own stitching?

Some, mostly prior to our departure. I concentrated on two pairs of socks while we were on the beach.

I knit a pair of guy socks, with a simple broken rib ankle and k1p1 ribbing to finish. There is only one in this picture. The other is now at parts unknown. At best guess, I dropped it at dusk on the beach and didn't notice that it was gone. Either seagulls or the sea made off with it. Somewhere there is either a lobster or a tern sporting a new brown habitat. And I need to get another ball of the same yarn and knit a third to make a pair. (Grrrr.) The other pair has a lacy pattern in the ankle. More on that another day.

And here's the latest strip on my sampler:

To which I will return once the socks are done.

One last note - to date (using the click-through count of the fourth part) - over 1,000 people have downloaded the complete Ensamplario Atlantio since I posted it two weeks ago. If you are looking for it, it's here. It's a PDF file - you need a recent version Acrobat Reader to open it. You can get Reader for free, for both Mac and Windows. Although I've gotten some thank-you posts and a couple of questions from people unfamiliar with Acrobat, I've had very little other feedback, and only one bug report - of fonts not displaying properly on an iPad II running the latest version of Safari. I'm looking into that problem and may repost the files later this week.

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Monday, July 11, 2011 12:21:03 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 
Thursday, June 30, 2011

Thanks to everyone for their kind words about Ensamplario Atlantio (EnsAtl)!

I'm delighted that folk find it useful. I was going to leave it up as the blog's front page for a while, but two stellar things came in that I had to share. Before them however, please note that I will be leaving the book available on String for a while longer yet.

The two things?

First, I've mentioned before that my main joy in designing is seeing what folk do with the patterns. I have to show this one off (click to enlarge the thumbnail):

This partlet was stitched by Kimiko Small (in the SCA, the talented Lady Joan Silvertoppe of Caid). She used the Buttery pattern in TNCM Plate 59:1. It's one of my originals, but it's based on period conventions, motifs and aesthetics. The partlet design, stitching, and most obviously the picture above are all hers. The photo is reproduced with her permission.

Kimiko, I'm thrilled! Well done! I'm quite excited to see this particular pattern picked up and worked so well. The partlet is an excellent showcase for your stitching. It's prime! You can read more about Kimiko's award-winning project and read her arts competition documentation on her blog.

Now, this ties into the Second Thing.

The Buttery is an omnibus pattern - a frame filled by a large number of different design motifs. In this case, flowers, herbs and fruits. I've augmented my original set of patterns, and stitched up even more Buttery fillings on a recent project of my own.

Now the new book is generating some buzz about my patterns. Hannah was kind enough to spread word about EnsAtl on her blog, enbrouderie. In the comments that accompany her post Rachel of VirtuoSew commented on my Dancing Pirate Octopodes pattern. Rachel wondered about working up alternates for DPO. Initial silly filings aside, that pattern has excellent potential to evolve into another omnibus design along the lines of Buttery, and I think Rachel's idea is a splendid one.

So I announce the first (to my knowledge) Crowdsource Design Blackwork Filling Project.

What's Crowdsourcing? In a nutshell, it's putting a project in front of a large number of otherwise unrelated/unassociated people, and asking them to apply their individual creativity to it, spreading the word and bringing all that creativity back together using 'net based communications. It's all the rage right now. Even the Defense Department's research arm (DARPA) has launched a crowdsourced projects to jump start the design process or solve sticky problems.

So. Reaching both behind to the past and into the future - why not one for double running stitch?

Here is a square with just the frame from Dancing Pirate Octopodes:

crowd.jpg

It's a simple JPG - shown above at full size. Right click on it and save the image. Then attack it with any graphics program, or print it out and doodle on the hard copy. Work up your own filling(s)! Be creative! Run amok! Just one request - this is not an adult-rated site. Please keep your designs family-friendly. (I reserve the right to do light editorial selection, if need be.)

When you're done, eMail the file, or transcription of the thing, or a scan or photo of your design to me by 10 July at the gmail address listed in this post . I'll assemble all submissions in one big layout, and share the results back here as quickly as I can. (If you'd like me to withhold your name rather than be credited on String, I'll be happy to do so.)

This isn't a contest - I've got no prizes to give away. But I think it will be lots of fun to see what everyone comes up with. So fire up your drawing program or sharpen your pencil. Let's see what our stitching crowd can devise!

Again, thanks to Hannah, the gang at Total Insanity, others at various Yahoo needlework discussion groups, and all other posters and email respondents for their welcome and acceptance of EnsAtl. Special thanks to Kimiko for making my day with her project. Thanks to Rachel for the idea of making more fills for DPO. And thanks in advance to everyone who will take a moment to share their own creativity for the joy of participating, and glory of their needle.

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Thursday, June 30, 2011 12:46:59 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Saturday, June 25, 2011

At long last, and as promised.  Ensamplario Atlantio: Being a Collection of Filling Patterns Suitable for Blackwork Embroidery is here in PDF format! 

I have to admit that my ambition ran away with me.  The entire thing is 40 pages long, with 35 plates of designs - over 220 or so individual all-over or filling patterns for double running stitch embroidery.  Some are very large repeats and would be better suited for free-use, others are smaller in scale and would work well as fillings in traditional outline/infilled blackwork (like on the pix of the cover, below):



The book ended up being SO large that I was unable to upload it, and downloading would be problematic for most people.  So I have cut it up into four parts:
I would dearly love to see any projects that use fillings from the collection.  Since I'm making this available as a free download, seeing what my pattern "children" are up to in the real world is my biggest reward.

And also a reminder - just because this is being made available freely doesn't mean that I have relinquished my author's rights.   This book may not be re-issued, re-posted, or sold by others without my specific permission.  I ask that needlework instructors wishing to use the thing get in touch with me so I can keep a log of by whom/when the book has been circulated.


Saturday, June 25, 2011 3:19:42 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [14]  | 
Thursday, June 23, 2011

The gauntlet was thrown. I was challenged to produce a chart for The Flying Spaghetti Monster, in all his noodly glory. At the risk of destroying any crumbs of credibility I might have as researcher, I respond.

FSM.jpg

Hah!

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Thursday, June 23, 2011 12:27:57 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [5]  | 
Tuesday, June 21, 2011

As you can see, the narrow scrolling border I used mirrored to fill in the empty area is only a few stitches shy of completion:

The eagle-eyed will note two small omissions I have to go back and complete. I blame working on the thing while watching a subtitled movie.

In other news, the PDF of the book of filling patterns is complete. I hope to post it here some time in the next week or so as I iron out some technical difficulties in posting a 10M file. I present the cover as a teaser:

Also - and just for fun - I present a pattern that did NOT make it into the filling book or the upcoming TNCM2. This one was done up as a silly present with several constituencies in mind - my eldest, who wanted more pirate skulls; a co-worker who cherishes the octopus as his totem beast; and my youngest, who has embarked on a world-wide quest for greater acceptance of "octopodes" as the proper plural when more than one cephalopod is sighted. (click on chart below for full size copy).

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Tuesday, June 21, 2011 12:21:19 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [4]  | 
Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Taaa Daah! The last page of my pattern collection - page 25:

Collection-v2_Page_25.jpg

All are new for this collection. #146 was inspired by an original pomegranate border I published in TNCM. #148 was similarly inspired by the beaded border from TNCM that I have previously shared here (repeated below, click on image to get it larger):

bead-border.jpg

#149 was inspired by an edging in Schonsperger's 1526 Ein New Modelbuch. His was a strip. Mine takes the main motif from his strip and inserts it into a lozenge. #147 builds on the interlace construction principles in pattern #67 of my first booklet, although this one is rendered as a line unit design instead of in block like square units.

So there you have it. 150 different blackwork filling patterns; some simple, some complex. And I could easily come up with another 150. But it would be more fun to see what others devise. I hope to have the PDF format booklet, with cover and intro essay out by the end of the holiday season. It will be available for free download here.

GIMP 107 - PRINT HINT

Printing or Saving: If you print out the pages constructed by the method in my tutorial you will probably find that the designs are rendered too small for easy use unless you use an enlargement factor via your printer driver dialog (the print settings dialog invoked when you issue a print command). BUT if crop your pattern, removing any unused page area, then you save your piece as a *.jpg or *.gif, like I did for the individual squares, the pattern won't shrink down to teenytiny, and will be as readable as mine.

IN SUMMARY

Please let me know if you've found these pages or the GIMP tutorial to be useful. I'd especially enjoy seeing works done using one of my 150.

However, I do request that all users abide by the restrictions noted in my kick-off post. If you are using these patterns for your own personal enjoyment or as a gift, have fun!

If you are intending on selling works derived from them - including stitched finished pieces, or issuing kits or publishing your own patterns using any of these designs - either for profit or charitable sale or donation for eventual sale - please do me the courtesy of sending me a note prior to doing so. In all probability I'll be delighted and ask nothing more than a bibliographic source statement in your pattern's literature or hang tag noting the source of some of your fillings, and providing link back here. As soon as the book is up and the link is stable, I will be happy to provide the bibliographic citation's format. But asking permission first would be a positive, noble and honorable act, for which I thank you in advance.

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010 3:10:09 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 
Monday, December 20, 2010

The penultimate page! Here's page 24:

Collection-v2_Page_24.jpg

All are new on this page. #139 and #140 are close cousins, sharing a central motif. The strawberries in #143 have their pips marked by little circles. I'd use very tiny knot stitches, an X over a 1x1 thread intersection or possibly even seed beads for them.

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Monday, December 20, 2010 12:47:02 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Sunday, December 19, 2010

Just two more pages after this one. Here's page 23:

Collection-v2_Page_23.jpg

All of these are new doodles, although #137 is a truncation of the framing device I used in my Buttery pattern. #133 and #134 are almost identical. The only difference between them is a second double running stitch line, turning the diagonals between the eyelet stars from steps to little squares. You can never have too many interlaces. #137 and #138 aren't the last one in the collection, I promise.


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Sunday, December 19, 2010 12:35:11 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Saturday, December 18, 2010

Getting close to the end. Here's page 22:

Collection-v1_Page_22.jpg

All of the patterns on this page are my own. Two of the smaller fillings in #131 are in my coif. Like my snails which I've recently found have crept all the way to Finland, the gnats in #128 were inspired by the period English embroiderers' love of insects (related thought - look into this worthy cause). I'm also fond of #130, which would be a wonderful all over or strip panel treatment for chemises, perhaps mirrored down the center of the garment.


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Saturday, December 18, 2010 12:50:24 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Friday, December 17, 2010

Here's page 21:

Collection-v1_Page_21.jpg

Pattern book junkies will recognize #124 and #125. Yes, that's Schonsperger's acorns (1524) in #125. I've altered the scale of #124 to make it more compact for use as a fill.

Thanks to all who have sent me thank-you notes, posting here, on various chat forums, or by direct mail. It's a delight to know that others are finding these patterns useful, and that delight is my chief motivator in sharing all of my patterns - stitching, crochet and knitting alike.

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Friday, December 17, 2010 12:56:19 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Thursday, December 16, 2010

And on to page 20:

Collection-v1_Page_20.jpg

Yes, more interlaces, and there are more to come, too. #119 appeared on my underskirt, but the others are new for this collection. #115 and #116 share a fundamental architecture. Try #116 either with the squared corners on the "in between" links, or with the softer edges resulting from a single diagonal stitch instead of the two that meet at right angles.

To echo Jenny, who posted on the Blackwork Yahoo group - simple geometrics are simple geometrics. They transcend any one craft. People who quilt; who build mosaics, marquetry or stained glass; or who crochet, knit or weave will all recognize commonality in these designs. I sincerely hope to see some wholesale cross-pollination here, with folk reporting back that they've found inspiration in this pattern collection for all sorts of uses I never imagined.

Use one of these designs in your original piece? I'd love to see it. I always enjoy seeing what my pattern "children" are up to out there in the wide, wide world.


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Thursday, December 16, 2010 3:28:03 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Wednesday, December 15, 2010

And page 19:

Collection-v1_Page_19.jpg

More doodles from my notebooks, both old and recent, but I have not published any of these before.

The interlace in #112 reminds me a lot of some of the more famous portraits of Henry VIII, but there's nothing on any of them that is a direct parallel, and nothing about it that would limit its use to Henry's lifetime. It would be killer done either infilled in gold, or on a voided background, perhaps on a book cover, pouch or sweet bag. Sweet bags were sort of like Elizabethan/Stuart gift wrapping. They were little decorative purses used to convey small presents. Similar small stitched bags were sometimes used as needlework tool kits (occasionally they come with a matching pincushion), or to hold mirrors or other grooming aids.

On the charting tutorial, other than a couple of install queries and a nastygram noting that I'm an idiot for giving away the pattern pages, I've had almost no feedback, so I am unsure of what problems folk are facing. I can't say I can answer every question and I certainly am no computer expert, but I'll try. And I do have evidence that people are finding these posts useful, so nastywriter - take a hike.

In fact, if anyone is or has done stitching based on these patterns, please feel free to send me a picture or a link. With your permission, I'll repost the image or the link here in the gallery of works done based on my patterns.

GIMP Charting Tutorial 106 - More Drawing Hints

By now everyone playing along should be able to draw. Here are some more methods and hints:

A way to erase: Select the Pencil tool from the Toolbox. In its settings window, choose

Mode: Color Erase

Now draw a new line on top of the segment you want to disappear. This is very useful for small touch-ups rather than wholesale deletions.

Another way to erase: Select the Eraser tool from the Toolbox (looks like a little piece of pink bubblegum). Set the brush size to something larger than the Circle(01) setting we use for drawing. Make sure the Hard Edge box is checked. Drag the eraser over the part that needs to go. Not quite as fine-tuned as the method above, but effective.

Yet another way to erase: Use one of the selection tools (the square, circle, lasso, wand or color select icons at the top of the Toolbox) to highlight the offending bit. Hit your delete key.

To flip (aka mirroring):

Select the bit you want to flip. <ctrl>C to copy and <ctrl>V to paste. The area selected will look all twinkly, and you'll note the creation of a new temporary layer in your layer toolbox:

layer.jpg

Now with the area to be flipped all twinkly, click on the Flip icon in the Toolbox:

flip.jpg

Note that I've got the first option under Affect selected - that flips the entire (temporary) layer where the bit I just pasted lives. That flips my image over. Now comes a tricky bit. One would think that once the bit has been flipped, it can be easily dragged into place. Not reliably so. I'm not sure why, but switching to the Move icon (the four-way arrow) and trying to drag the bit around doesn't work. What I usually do is after flipping the image so that it's in the orientation I want, and while it's still twinkly, I use <ctrl>X to cut it into the paste buffer, then paste it back into the drawing with <ctrl>V. NOW I can mouse over it until I get the movement icon (looks like a four-way arrow) to drag it into position.

Here's the result of copying, pasting, flipping, then re-cutting, pasting and finally nudging into place a simple heart:

hearts.jpg

It sounds complex, but since most of the work is control-key or arrow presses (see tweaking, below), it's really quite quick and easy.

To tweak alignment:

Sometimes when a pasted, rotated, or moved bit is inserted into the drawing it ends up being out of alignment on the grid. This is because the selection box is constrained in size so that even if its origin is on the grid, its termination is one pixel shy. However, fixing minor alignment problems is easy. Select your offending bit (the lower heart in the sample below), and use your keyboard arrow keys to nudge it into place. Again, like in Flip, I have the best success doing this by selecting, <ctrl>X to cut, <ctrl>Y to paste, then using the arrow keys to nudge the pasted bit into place. Please don't ask me why the Move command doesn't seem to work reliably for this. I haven't a clue.

Rotating:

Again similar to Flip. Select the bit to be rotated and copy/paste it to create a temporary layer. Click on the rotate tool, then on the twinkly selected pasted area. The rotate dialog box will appear:

rotate.jpg

Rather than drive myself nuts trying to freehand rotate, I type my desired angle into the Angle box in the rotate dialog. In our case that's an easy 90, 45 or 180 degrees. Usually 90. Then I click on the "Rotate" button in the Rotate dialog box.

The selected bit will appear in its new orientation. For whatever reason, moving the image post rotation is better behaved than moving it post-Flip. I can usually click immediately on the rectangular selection tool (first in the Toolbox), then mouse around to get the move indicator, and arrow the still twinkly rotated selection into place. Here's the just rotated image, prior to final tweaking:

pre-tweak.jpg

And here's the same image, after I've nudged the two new petals (at 9:00 and 3:00) into final position using my arrow keys.

post-tweak.jpg

Anchoring temporary or floating windows: Sometimes I end up with a floating or temporary window that I want to merge into my main pattern area. Easy. <ctrl>H nails it down.

Deselecting all selection boxes: Sometimes I want to pencil in a line, but click as I might, no line appears. What's usually happened is that I've got a selection box active somewhere. <Shift><ctrl>A will turn off any that might be in use.

So ends this basic GIMP charting tutorial. We've only touched on some of the simplest options and commands available in GIMP, but covered most of the tools needed for this type of charting. I will leave color selection to you, but I'll report back when I've figured out cloning via the Stamp tool. Please let me know if you have found this to be useful.


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Wednesday, December 15, 2010 1:26:30 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [4]  | 
Monday, December 13, 2010

Here's page 18:

Collection-v2_Page_18.jpg

#103 and #108 are fillings I've stitched before on my underskirt, coif and other projects. The rest are new. To be immodest, I'm quite fond of my acorns (#105). I think that will have to end up on my current work in progress. Yes, I do have another work in progress, and no - you haven't missed it. I haven't previewed here yet.

GIMP Charting Tutorial 105 - Finally! Drawing The Design.

If you've been following along, you should now have a GIMP document with four layers in it, a background, a dots layer, one called PATTERN HERE, and one entitled Donuts.

We're now ready to draw.

Using the Layer Navigation window, click on the PATTERN HERE layer. Obviously, all drawing will happen here. If you've saved, quit then re-opened your work you've probably noticed that Snap to Grid has turned itself off. Double check and make sure that it's selected: VIEW-Snap to Grid.

I prefer a thicker rather than thinner line when I draw my pattern. I think it's easier to see and count. To get it, I select the Pencil tool in my Toolbox and use the following pencil settings:

Mode: Normal

Opacity: 100.0

Brush: Circle (01) <-the same tiny dot we used to build the Dots layer

Scale: 1.30

(None of the other settings should be checked off)

Making sure that my Color Specification boxes are set up so that the color I wish to draw with is in the top (overlapping) box, I can now draw.

With the pencil selected, I click on a dot, then holding down the shift key to constrain my line to be straight, I click on the dot marking the end of my run of stitches. What I end up with is one straight line, divided up into individual stitch units. In the example below I've drawn a four-unit stair step by making six clicks:

line.jpg

So we're now off and running. Some things to remember as you draw your designs:

1. If you've got the pencil tool selected and you think you're drawing but no line appears, check to make sure that you don't have an active selection window. To close any that might be open, use <ctrl><shift>A.

2. To cut, you can use the selection box in the upper left corner of the Toolbox window or any of the other selection tools. The box is easiest to use because you can constrain it to snip out pieces even with the grid, making pasting on the grid easier.

3. It's a bit easier to copy an area, then paste it immediately (using <ctrl>V) and then drag the result to its final resting place than it is to copy an area, reselect the original and THEN paste. If you do this, the new bit will end up in the middle of the active screen and grabbing it can be difficult.

4. If you paste something and wish to move it, mouse around until your cursor turns into a four-way arrow. If you don't see the four way arrow and try to click and drag the newly pasted bit, you'll excise and paste a small area of it in the current location instead. If this happens, remember that Undo <ctrl>Z is your friend.

5. OH NO! My drawing disappeared! No problem. You probably killed the entire PATTERN HERE layer by hitting <ctrl>X instead of <ctrl>Z. Undo with a real <ctrl>Z.

6. Moving using the Move tool (the little four-way arrow in the Toolbox) is manipulating the layer rather than the bit I just pasted. If this happens, check the options box for the Move tool. There's a row of icons across its top. One is labeled layer, one is labeled selection (mouse over to show labels). Make sure selection is highlighted, not layer.

Tomorrow we'll cover image manipulation - flipping, mirroring and rotating. At that point we'll have pretty much covered all I know about using GIMP for charting these patterns. If you have any questions on the material in this series, please feel free to post them here.

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Monday, December 13, 2010 1:08:32 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 
Sunday, December 12, 2010

First, page 17:

Collection-v1_Page_17.jpg

#97, #101, and #102 are recharted off previous embroidery projects. The others are new, more doodles devised while I was preparing this collection. Most of the coming pages feature at least one fill as elaborate as #100. They'd be good for using in large, outlined areas, or as stand-alone fields on a sampler like those in the lower half of the famous Jane Bostocke sampler.

GIMP Chart Inga Tutorial 104 - Building the Design and Mask (aka Donut) Layers.

In the last post we learned how to start a new layer. We need two more. First use LAYER-New Layer to create another new one. Name this one "PATTERN HERE".

Now it gets interesting. You'll see three layers in the Layers navigation window. Background, Dots and PATTERN HERE. PATTERN HERE is shaded. Click on the layer named "Dots." It should now be shaded. We want to create a new layer, cloned from this one. So, making sure that the Dots layer is shaded in the navigation window, use LAYER-Duplicate Layer. You'll notice a new one named "Dots Copy" added to the navigation window. In that window, click on Dots Copy and drag it to the top of the stack. Your Layer navigation window should now look like this:

dots-copy.jpg

For the sake of our sanity, let's rename "Dots Copy." In the navigation window, right click on Dots Copy and choose "Edit Layer Attributes. This will open a window that will allow you to give the layer a new name. I suggest "Donuts."

You now have four layers: Donuts, PATTERN HERE, Dots and Background.

Let's create our donuts. Make sure that Donuts is highlighted in the Layer navigation window. Then choose the Select by Color Tool from the Toolbox window. This is the one that looks like little stack of blue, red and green blocks, with a finger pointing to the red one. With that tool highlighted, click on any dot. ALL of the dots will begin flickering. (That's good). You've now selected all of them.

To draw the donuts, we're going to use a couple of special command. With your dots select use SELECT-Grow to get the Grow Selection dialog box. Type 1 in the "Grow Selection by" fill-in:

grow.jpg

Now let's exclude the dot at the center by using SELECT-Border to get the Border Selection dialog box. Type 1 in the "Border selection by" dialog box:


border.jpg

Now I suggest you zoom in more: VIEW-Zoom-8:1 (800%). This is what you'll see:


dots-border.jpg

We need to fill the newly constructed borders with white. Up in the Toolbox in the lower left corner of the top panel, you'll see two overlapping Color Specification boxes, with a little 90-degree two-headed arrow next to them. Click on the little two-headed arrow. This will swap your previous background color (white) with your old foreground color (black). You are now ready to use the color white to fill the donuts. Choose the Flood Fill Tool (it looks like a spilling paint bucket) and place the tip of its arrow cursor inside one of the highlighted donuts. Click, and ALL of the donuts will be filled with the color white.

toolbox-2.gif
Now we need to get rid of the black dot in the center of each donut. Go back to the Select by Color tool (the stacked blue/red/green block and hand in the Toolbox), and click on one of the black dots. The outline around your donuts will disappear, and the dots will be highlighted again. With the dots highlighted, hit <ctrl>X. You will still see dots (they're on the Dots layer), but the ones on the Donuts layer will now be gone. You can test this by clicking on the little eye next to the Dots layer in the Layer navigation window. Click the eye next to Dots, and the dots on your screen should disappear. Click it again and they'll return. Remember to save your work.

We now have our base grid structure and mask all set up, and we are now ready to draw a design. But more on that tomorrow.

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Sunday, December 12, 2010 1:03:56 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Saturday, December 11, 2010

On to Page 16:

Collection-v1_Page_16.jpg

We've got ribbons (#91, use ganged like this or as a single border); another twirly (#93), and a bunch of wildly obvious tiny spot patterns (#94, six in one plate). I've used all of these teenies in my old projects, they're very handy for filling in spaces too small to use other, larger patterns to any good effect. And they're also very useful for background fields in voided work. It's interesting that #96 at a distance reads like a basket weave. You can see that in the thumbnail.


GIMP Charting Tutorial 103 - Building the Dot Layer

O.k. Yesterday we opened the program, opened the Layers window and set our grid spacing constraints. Today we get to use those things to add a layer called "Dots":

LAYER-New Layer

You should see this dialog box:

12-7-2010 9-01-32 PM.jpg

Type in "Dots" for the layer name. Width and height should both be 320 pixels. The fill type should be "Transparency." Except for the dots we're going to draw, this layer should be see-through. Once you confirm that the settings are correct, press "OK."

You'll see that the new layer has been added to the layer management window:

dot-layer.jpg

The shaded area on the layer management window shows you which layer is currently active - the one on which all changes you are making will be stored. You can hop among layers by clicking on them in this window

Now we can add our dots. To make the dots I'm adding easier to see, I've taken the highly optional step of making my original grid indicators appear in red (this is back on the EDIT-Preferences-Default Grid dialog. Foreground color = red).

To add dots, I select the pencil tool on the Toolbox window. Tool-specific options will appear below the cluster of tool icons every time you activate a tool.

To make our dots, we want to use the following pencil settings:

Mode = Normal

Opacity = 100.0

Brush = Circle (01) - that's chosen by clicking on the little square and picking the SMALLEST available dot.

Scale = 1.00

dot-pencil.jpg

Now we can begin adding dots. Again to make life easier, zoom in on the active image:

VIEW-Zoom-2:1 (200%)

You can also increase the size of your drawing window so that the entire editable area is visible.

Now using the pencil tool, click on EVERY ONE of the background grid dots. "Oh no! This is tedious", you say. You're right. We're going to cheat.

Click on a bunch of them, drawing about 3 or 4 rows of 6-10 dots. Now we're going to copy and paste them. Because we've got our grid set we will be able to see exactly where to paste them.

Select the square selection tool (the dotted line box in the upper left corner of the toolbox. Center the cross hair cursor it provides on your upper/leftmost dot, and drag the purple selection box to encompass all of the dots you wish to copy. (Make sure that the upper left corner is exactly centered on one of your drawn dots.) Hit <ctrl>C to copy.

dot-select.jpg

Now hit <ctrl>V to paste. The new dots will appear exactly on top of the old dots, making everything look "twinkly."

Move your cursor back over the area that's twinkling until it turns into a little four-way compass arrow, now click and drag the twinkly dots on top of your grid dot indicators, taking care that they align exactly. If for any reason this goes wrong, do not despair. GIMP offers (near) unlimited <ctrl>Z undo.

I repeat this process, grabbing ever larger areas of dots and pasting them until my entire field is filled. Needless to say, for a whole page this can get tiresome, but once that page is set up and saved it's there for infinite re-use. Speaking of which - make sure you save your work before going on.

In the interests of making these posts manageable, I'll end here. Tomorrow we build the drawing and donut mask layers.

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Saturday, December 11, 2010 4:09:35 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Friday, December 10, 2010

Here's 15!

Collection-v1_Page_15.jpg

All of the patterns on this page are new, doodled up as I was transcribing the older ones from previous booklets and previous projects. I'm a sucker for interlaces. Try #87 with other small spot motifs (or nothing) in the centers of the intertwined wreathes. #88 is fun. It's all 90-degree and 45-degree angles, but it gives the impression of close packed globes. #89 is not quite as mind bending as some of the other eccentric repeats. Younger Daughter sees two different design shiruken in it, but I think she's been reading too many manga.

GIMP Charting Tutorial 102 - Getting Started

To start, obviously you're going to need to download the software. As I mentioned before, it's free, and its available here. You're on your own installing it on your particular machine. I don't have access to a Mac or Linux machine here at home, but I'm assuming that look/feel are very similar across all platforms. Also, I'll be covering this pretty slowly, aiming at folk who are totally unfamiliar with this style of program. I know lots of you are further along the learning curve, and will be tempted to skip ahead. "Go right ahead! Get messy! Make mistakes!" That's the fun of learning.

Upon opening the software you'll see something like this (the red/orange is my desktop background, not part of the program):

12-7-2010 8-54-30 PM.jpg

The small, empty window is the program's main work area. The long narrow window contains the toolbox of available commands. It may be smaller than this to start - I happen to have the detail control for the pencil tool displayed. You'll note that unlike many programs GIMP's various subcomponents can be opened or closed, or put anywhere that you find convenient. My first step is always to open the Layers subwindow. You'll find it under the "Windows" command in the main window, under the menu entry "Dockable Dialogs." I'm going to abbreviate the command tree like this:

WINDOWS-Dockable Dialogs-Layers

All caps will always refer to a menu item in the top line toolbar of the main GIMP window, with the items after that being in order of selection from that command's sub-menus.

Now we have three little windows open. The main GIMP window, the Command Toolbox, and the Layers window (shown on the left of the Command Toolbox for now, but you can put it anywhere):


12-7-2010 8-56-07 PM.jpg

Next is to establish the settings and preferences we need to make drawing on a constrained grid quick and easy. I tried out many grid spacings before settling on these recommendations. Feel free to experiment, but start with this combo for the same look/feel I was using:

Open a new drawing: FILE-New

This will open a dialog box in which you can specify your new file's size, and the measurement units used in it. I suggest something small to start. My little filling pattern swatches were squares of 320 pixels. And yes - I do advocate you use pixels as the measurement unit for now.

Specify the grid spacing: EDIT-Preferences

This opens up a large universe of settings to play with. We're only concerned with grid spacing. Look for the Default Grid icon in the Preferences pop-up box. Click on that.

12-7-2010 8-58-17 PM.jpg

Under Appearance, select Intersections (dots) - this will render the reference grid in dot form so you can see where to draw your own later. For Spacing, enter 10 pixels width and 10 pixels wide. Under Offset, make sure both values are zero. Click OK. We've now got our grid, now we need to show it and constrain drawing so that we (mostly) end up creating dots and lines aligned with it.

To show the grid: VIEW-Show Grid

To constrain most drawing to the grid: VIEW-Snap to Grid

Your drawing canvas should now look like this:

12-7-2010 9-00-15 PM.jpg

Save it. Good job. In the interests of keeping these posts manageable we end here. Tomorrow we'll explore creating layers, configuring the pencil tool for making dots, and making the dot layer.

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Friday, December 10, 2010 2:02:20 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Thursday, December 09, 2010

We forge on to Page 14:

Collection-v1_Page_14.jpg

Of these, #79, #80 and #84 appear on my skirt. The others are new, doodled up as I was working on this collection. And here's the start of the promised tutorial on using GIMP to do exactly that. Please note that Elder Daughter noodled out this method, which we then confirmed that others were using as well. (There are few things as useful as a home-bred brain trust.)

How to Use GIMP for Line Unit Charting - Drawing Metaphors

For starters, let's talk about drawing metaphors. Piece of paper and a crayon. Nice opaque paper. Nice (mostly) opaque crayon. That's what many drawing programs feature, and what almost all of the stitch painting programs use. You draw something on the page, it's there in one spot. It can be erased, rotated or moved, but it's embedded on the page once it lands. Draw a cow next to a barn with an open door, and the cow stays there. It can't be peeled off, razored out or slid over to stand in, on, or behind the barn without leaving a cow-shaped hole where it used to be (or taking a bit of the barn behind the cow along if you select and move the cow).

MS Powerpoint and other lower-end drawing packs go one better, by adding a cut-paper collage type element to the crayon metaphor, with things that can be placed on top of other things. But even these "pieces of paper" ride not as independent layers but as daughter elements on a single page. And the stitch charting programs mostly stick to the crayon or collage models, although they do enable selection by a discriminating feature - in their case usually stitch type or color. There's always room for quibbling, but by and large, these programs all reside in a very flat world.

GIMP does not work like this.

GIMP like many other higher end graphics programs offers multiple opaque, semi-opaque or transparent layers. Sounds confusing, but it isn't. Think of it like an old-fashioned animator working on a cartoon. Animators worked in layers, painted on multiple sheets of a transparent plastic like material. When finished, those layers were stacked up, and the viewer looked down through the entire stack, seeing through the transparent bits to the drawings on the layers below.

For an animator the lowest level would have been the background. In our farm scene, perhaps the green of the grass, darker green of the trees in the distance, and blue of the sky. Nice and solid. Then the animator would layer one or more transparent cells on top of the background. The next layer might be see through except for a painting of one big open-doored barn on it, and only the barn. There might be a third see through layer on top of that with a fence that sits in between the viewer and the barn. Now for a top layer, also transparent, and again with just one design element drawn on it. That one may have nothing on it except the cow.

The animator could move these cells around. She could slide the one with the cow over so that the cow could graze on either side of the barn. She could change the order of the layers. If the cow layer was on top, it looked like the cow was outside the fence (between the viewer and the fence). If the cow layer was between the barn and the fence, Bossie was safe in her paddock. And if the cow layer was behind the barn and the cell was positioned just right, our pet could peek out of the open barn door.

This is how GIMP works. It allows you to use multiple layers to isolate individual design elements, and to mask the layers below. Layers can be totally independent, or they can be ganged so that if one is moved, its pals move too, preserving the spatial relationship among them. They can be moved, reordered, rotated, flipped, hidden, or rendered more or less opaque. Instead of thinking flat, crayon and paper style, to use GIMP you need to think in onion-like layers.

To draft my patterns I used four layers:

  1. A plain white background

  2. A layer of evenly spaced dots (the background dot grid)

  3. A layer containing the line drawings that make up the designs

  4. A layer containing little white "donuts" - very small white halos aligned to the dot grid in layer 2.

The dot grid in Layer 2 established my layout - the grid spacing for my stitches. Layer 3 contained UNBROKEN lines, constrained to the established grid. Donut-bearing Layer 4 "eclipsed" the black lines, making them look like they were drawn as dashes. The hollow center of each donut let just one little dot of the underlying black line (or naked dot from way underneath in layer 2) show through.

Once my basic four layer "page" had been constructed, the only place I did actual drawing on was Layer #3. I never touched the background, the dots or the donuts again.

For the record, I suppose I could have condensed this into three layers, with the dot grid appearing ON my background, but it's much easier to delete and replace a non-background layer, so I went with four. I never underestimate my potential to make a dumb mistake, so I always try to leave myself a graceful way to recover, just in case it becomes necessary.

That's the basic logic. The why of what I did. More on how to use GIMP to set up a four layer grid-constrained pattern page, starting in the next post.

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Thursday, December 09, 2010 1:57:42 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Wednesday, December 08, 2010

Lucky Page 13:

Collection-v1_Page_13.jpg

This is the last of the pages that mostly contains patterns from my first booklet. You'll recognize #73 as having been on my Eve Was Framed unfinished sampler as one of the collection of strip patterns. The others are all on my blackwork underskirt.

Let's start talking about how I did these.

I'm using GIMP. It's an open source drawing/drafting/graphics editing program. I won't got into the technical details of the thing, but the important points to know are that it's available for free, it's implemented for Windows in English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, Japanese and several other languages. It's also widely used by Linux people, who often have it as part of their standard software set. GIMP also can run on Macs. You can download it here (click "show other downloads for Linux and Mac). User and tutorials manuals are here.

To be honest, GIMP is a little bit intimidating if you're not used to programs like Photoshop or Illustrator. If you've only used Powerpoint type graphics or dedicated stitching programs, I'd suggest saving sitting down with GIMP until you have some quiet time, no deadlines, and a calming cup of cocoa. I don't profess to know this program at more than entry level. I have only tinkered with a very limited number of features, for only one specific purpose, so please don't write to me asking for help. Pretty much everything I know will be contained in the next several posts. But these should be enough to get others started using it for graphing line unit patterns.

Lesson One tomorrow.

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Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Here's the 12th page:

Collection-v1_Page_12.jpg

#69 is a new one, doodled up as I was working on #68. Very similar structure, but as you can see from the thumbnail, a very different distance "read." These thumbnails are quite useful for evaluating the overall effect of a pattern when seen from far away. The rest on this page are either in my old booklet or graphed up from my blackwork underskirt.

I could keep going with these forever, but I sense that most folks have a more limited attention span. Right now I have 25 pages finished - that's more than 150 individual patterns (some of the later pages feature more than one pattern in a square). I'm going to keep posting them one page a day until all 25 are up. Then I'll release the booklet. In the mean time, I won't be idle. My pattern drafting boot camp exercise has been very effective. I've now mastered the method and have moved on to work on my sequel to TNCM.

In other news - it's cookie time here at String. Long time readers know that each December the kids and I bake 10 kinds of cookies. Today we started, with the improved-by-long-curing Bourbon cocoa cookies taking their traditional place as our kick-off. This year's line up (subject to change at our collective whim) includes these standards:

  • Chocolate chip
  • Mexican wedding cakes
  • Peanut butter
  • Buffalo rum balls
  • Chocolate crinkles (aka Earthquakes)
  • Oysters (a hazelnut spritz/chocolate sandwich)
  • Decorated sugar cookie cut-outs
  • Gingersnaps

New this year, we go for a multicultural pair to round out the ten:

  • Benne Wafers - a sesame, brown sugar cookie loved in the Southern US
  • Koalcky - A Hungarian cream cheese/jam cake/cookie, sort of like a fold over rather than rolled Rugalach.
Oh. And Ms. Jean's fudge.


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Tuesday, December 07, 2010 2:04:26 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Sunday, December 05, 2010

Page 11:

Collection-v1_Page_11.jpg

#65 is another eye-bender, calculated to drive stitchers insane. #66 is a new doodle. Other than that, all appear on my previous projects or in my first booklet.


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Sunday, December 05, 2010 12:26:21 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Saturday, December 04, 2010

Page 10.

Collection-v1_Page_10.jpg

#59 in this set is a bit odd. If you look at it, you'll see that the basic unit is a square, with a boxed X in the center, in alternate rotations. Where four of these squares meet, there's another boxed X, worked skew on the grid. The rest present no special challenges - no half stitches or other oddities.


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Saturday, December 04, 2010 12:52:25 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Friday, December 03, 2010

Plate 9. Lots more to go!

Collection-v1_Page_09.jpg

More interlaces! Three on this page. No special notes about working any of these. These are still patterns first published in my 1978 booklet.

If you're new to blackwork, it's not so much a single monolithic style as a collection of styles popular over about 150 years, and in many cross-pollinating countries and regions. It's a term loosely applied to monochromatic or limited palette embroideries. Black was very popular. So was deep crimson (although I have no examples below). Other colors were not unknown and works were often further enriched with metal embroidery or spangles. The one main unifying characteristic seems to be an aesthetic of strong contrast, a white or near white linen ground.

Some examples are clearly done on the count, others freehand. In one sub-style florals or geometrics are described with a solid color, often heavy outline, and then infilled using one of several techniques. The patterns I've been presenting are representative of the small diaper patterns typical of one of the filling techniques.

If you're looking for a nice visual survey on the various types of stitching that are commonly clumped together under the blackwork label, one source is the Blackwork Gallery maintained at the Medieval & Renaissance Material Culture website by Karen Larsdattir. There are many other good sites out there and I hope to share links to some of them over time, but this site has assembled links to a very representative artifacts and artwork showing blackwork on clothing and accessory items. If you have hours to lavish on the subject, I'd start there.

If you've got less time to spend and want the 200-foot overview, I present these links, gleaned from Karen's page, along with minimal commentary.

First, the style that my pieces are in, sometimes called "Inhabited Scrolling Blackwork," the heavy outlines, geometric fillings variant. Unknown lady, 1587, Queen Elizabeth, 1580

Here's a similar style, but with a single very simple filling stitch -Forehead Cloth, 16th, 17th Century,

And one done with totally freehand fillings, shaded and mottled like shading with ink stippling - V&A T.4-1935, 1620s

And ones done with what may be a mix of counted and freehand fillings - V&A T.113-118-1997, 1575-1585 (also here); Mary Cornwallis, 1580

Scrolling blackwork in two colors - Unknown lady, 1595, Coif attributed to Anne Boleyn (but it looks later to me)

Totally freehand scrolling, no fillings at all - Lady Kytson, 1540-1546

Then there is the more linear strip or strapwork blackwork style. The strip patterns on the samplers I've done over the past year are of this broad subfamily - Young girl, 1525-1540, Portrait of a Young Lady, 1520-1530, Mrs. Pemberton, 1540.

Of course there are Jane Seymour's famous cuffs, 1536

This man's shirt is the source of one of the patterns I used on a recent sampler, V&A T.112-1972. Also you'll note that it greenish blue. I don't believe that it has faded from black because the color is uniform all over the piece. (Note the simple twist on the cuffs - look familiar?)

I really like this lady's underskirt or smock skirt. You can just make out the large scale strapwork, crisp enough to have been countwork - Courtesan, 1530-1535

But not all of the strip type patterns were worked on the count - Man in Red, 1520

Proof that not every collar seen from both sides was worked double sided. This one clearly has different patterns on the inside and outside of the same garment - Lady in Green, 1528-1532.

Some blackwork is hard to identify as being either done on the count or freehand. I'd say that this lady's sleeves and cuffs were probably done counted, but her collar is harder to pin down. It's a nice example of a scrolling pattern though, that may or may not be infilled, inhabited blackwork style - Lady of the Bodeham Family, 1540-1545

And then there are pieces that show all over patterns, either scattered or, well - all over. These look counted to me - Coif, 1600, Lady, 1593

Chronologies are hard to pin down because fashions migrated and slowly from region to region, mutating as they traveled. Still it's safe to say that the strip type styles tended to be popular earlier and longer than the scrolling styles, and were popular across a wider range of geography, spanning all of Europe. Eventually some of them came down to us through both the Old and New World sampler traditions; with a multigenerational, transoceanic game of Telephone blurring their patterns slowly over time.

The scrolling stuff doesn't seem to be well represented before the 1550s or so, but really came into vogue over the ensuing 50 years. The inhabited scrolling styles seem to have achieved their greatest popularity in England and areas of English influence. Finally, the stippling style of fillings seem to have evolved at the end of classical blackwork's reign of popularity, although freehand fillings sit happily side by side with counted ones from the earliest appearances of the scrolling outline style.

I'll post more on this as time and space allow.

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Friday, December 03, 2010 1:48:23 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [4]  | 
Thursday, December 02, 2010

Page 8, as promised:

Collection-v1_Page_08.jpg

This one features a nice assortment of contrasts. The lattice interlace in #43 is a simple pattern I use again and again. You'll see as this collection moves on there will be LOTS more interlaces, some open like #48, some more twisty and dark.

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Thursday, December 02, 2010 12:23:35 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Wednesday, December 01, 2010

And here's page 7:

Collection-v1_Page_07.jpg

A rather boring one for sure. But lots of highly useful smaller repeat patterns, good for small areas or contrast with the busy, larger ones.

I'm having fun drawing these up, combing over the stitched pieces and drafting out what was stitched. And making up new ones. But not these. These are all from my notebooks, and all appear on my big blackwork underskirt and Forever Coif. #39 and #40 are especially useful for small areas. My coif has lots of those:


coifdetail.jpg

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Wednesday, December 01, 2010 12:24:58 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Tuesday, November 30, 2010

On to page 6. Remember - you can click on the page images to get a US letter size full page printable JPG. A PDF compendium of the whole set will be issued after the last page is posted here.

Collection-v1_Page_06.jpg

I'm also fond of #31, #34, and #35. #34 is calculated to drive you dizzy while stitching. It takes a bit to wrap the brain around the eccentric spacing on the repeat. But it's worth it. I've used it dozens of times, sometimes with little crosses sporting a centered cross stitch when I wanted something more uniformly visually dense. I'm not wild about the interlace in #33. It's too skinny, although at a distance (mocked up by the tiny thumbnail above) it looks better than it does close up.

If enough folk are interested, I'll post an illustrated tutorial on using open source/free GIMP for this style of charting.


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Tuesday, November 30, 2010 12:10:19 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 
Sunday, November 28, 2010

Page 5:

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This is turning into quite a holiday present. I've now posted five pages (30 fillings), and because I'm continuing on to graph up other patterns I've improvised as I stitched my projects, plus others in my notebooks, I can safely say that I'll be posting a page a day through the mid-December at the least. Possibly longer.

On today's page you'll see a couple of my favorites. #27 and #29 I've used again and again. I like the voided flowers formed by #27, and I like the movement in #29. #28 is also an old fave. That same spiraled band appears in all my booklets as a simple border, sometimes published with a corner. You can see it (with corner) on my ancient pre-SCA "Eve Was Framed" unfinished sampler, circa 1975 or so:

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More about this old, unfinished piece here.


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Sunday, November 28, 2010 7:01:51 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Saturday, November 27, 2010

As promised I return to the keyboard and post the fourth page of blackwork filling patterns. Again these are patterns originally published in my 1978 booklet, redrafted and re-issued here.

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More thanks to those not mentioned yet who have offered encouragement and thanks, including (but not limited to) local Carolingian Ygraine; String readers TexAnne, Pam, twerp, Cailee, fourdny2, PamC, and Annanna; and Yahoo Blackwork Group members Sherry, Linda, Annabelle, Anita, Esther, Sharon, Gail, Millie, Nicole, Viv, Elspeth, Georgia, Susan, Audrey, Rebecca, Nancy, Heather-Joy, Gaz, Viji, Magda, Elizabeth, Sorcha, Isabella, Maria, Liadain, Jean, Millie, and Shirley. Apologies if I've left anyone out.

More tomorrow!

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Saturday, November 27, 2010 8:27:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Saturday, November 20, 2010

And Page 3:

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Again, these are patterns that I published in my first booklet back in 1978, and that are stitched into the piece that became my blackwork underskirt. I am going to take a Blog Vacation this coming week. Look for more pages after the holiday. I've got roughly 15 more in queue for publication. At least.

Again thanks to all who posted or emailed me encouragement or who have lent inspiration over the years. Like Pal of Pal Mathilde. Great stuff at her site!

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Saturday, November 20, 2010 1:58:40 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 
Friday, November 19, 2010

And here's the second page:

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#10 is unusual in that the little isolated straight stitches that fill in the "background" area behind the large cross shapes are not stitched on the same grid as the rest of the pattern. But if you're working on even weave you'll see immediately and clearly where that stitch belongs.

The sharp-eyed will be able to pick out #9 and #7 in the detail shot of my underskirt. I assure you that #10 is there too, but it's shown in a very small snippet. (I'm going to have to take more detail shots of this piece and of my Forever Coif for this series).

Which brings me to an obvious observation. You'll note that some of these patterns offer small repeats - like #10. Others like #11 are larger, covering more ground before the design cycles. Smaller repeats work well in smaller design areas. Larger repeats show better when used in larger areas. But that doesn't mean that either scale pattern should reserved exclusively for one use or another. Sometimes "zooming in" on a sub-unit of a larger design is a perfect fill choice. And sometimes the uniformity and regularity of a fine-grain pattern is what's needed to fill a larger area, especially if it's near other areas with fussy or complex fills.

Thanks again to all who have encouraged this project. Not the least of whom is Long Term Needlework Pal Kathryn Goodwyn (author of Stalking the Wild Assisi). Oh. That reminds me! ** Hi Fred! **

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Friday, November 19, 2010 12:08:09 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Thursday, November 18, 2010

Here's the first page of the Blackwork FillingsCollection, as discussed in my last post. I intend to publish a page each day or so until I run out of pages. (I may take some time off over the upcoming US holiday week though.)

The doc below is a full page JPG (click on it to view/download it at full scale). Eventually, when all the pages have been shown here (and I expect that to be in the neighborhood of 20 or so), I intend to also offer the entire collection as a single PDF, for home printing or viewing on any PDF-capable reader.

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As far as the provenance for these patterns - my notes from 1978 aren't complete. Some I found by examining historical blackwork samples. Others I doodled up as I worked on what became my underdress. And a few (though none on this page) are fresh, invented as I played with graphing up the others.

I did try to constrain the angles employed in all of my filling patterns to 90 and 45 degrees in order to maintain a visual symmetry among all of the geometrics used, and to restrict all lines to the native grid of the fabric (no half stitches or stitches displaced one thread over from the standard 2x2 thread matrix). However, there are a couple of exceptions. One is Pattern #5 on today's plate. The stitching logic for that one is to work the diagonals of squared cross stitches; then take the long stitches from each of the "shoulders" of the stairstep diamonds formed by the intersecting lines of cross stitches into the centermost point of each diamond. It's easy if you're using plain even weave linen - that center hole is very evident. But if you're using Aida, or another ground cloth a bit of fiddling may be in order.

As to what I mean by the copyright restriction on the page - if you're working up your own sampler, have at these patterns. Enjoy! If you're planning on making works for sale or donation based on these fillings - either finished stitched pieces or published designs, please contact me. In all probability I'll freely grant permission, but the courtesy of notification and formality of reply is respectful to all parties involved. And if you're looking to republish or reproduce these pages or the patterns on them, please contact me for specific license to do so before reposting, reprinting, or republishing my work.

Thanks to all who voiced support for this venture. I hope the forthcoming pages prove useful, and whet everyone's appetite for other full scale works to come. Questions, comments, criticisms and other feedback is most welcome.


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Thursday, November 18, 2010 4:03:56 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 
Monday, November 15, 2010

Given Chris Laning's confirmation of our independently devised charting method, and my own impatience to get started, I've decided that using GIMP in the multi-layer mode is the way to meet my graphing challenge. That means one layer for background grid, one for pattern, and a "mask" layer of little white donuts around each grid point to separate the solid pattern lines into stitch units. Thanks also to Ariel who had a very innovative suggestion about using MetaPost, but the complexity of some of the patterns I will be doing will quickly exceed the practicality of her solution.

To practice up for these more complex designs I decided to regraph the collection of 72 blackwork fillings I published back in 1978, plus some more from my own notebooks that didn't make it into that booklet. These are the fillings I used in the blackwork underskirt I stitched back in 1976-1977.

underskirt.jpg underskirt-det.jpg

Not being able to resist a doodle-capable medium, I've done up a few more, too. I've got about 100 of these fillings now graphed out in neat little squares and ready to share, but I've not decided on the most efficient sharing method. I'm leaning to composing them into pages, and sharing the pages one by one, so that they can be seen before they're downloaded. An alternative would be making a new PDF booklet and post that. In either case, my intent is to publish them here for free download under my own copyright, rather than try to sell the thing.

Here are two samples to whet your appetite. Any feedback? Suggestions?

fillings-1.jpgfillings-2.jpg

And special thanks again to Chris, who has asked that I spread the word among both SCA and non-SCA stitchers about a valuable embroidery resource. The SCA's West Kingdom's Needleworkers' Guild maintains a very useful on-line library of articles on historical stitching - all from the hands-on perspective. You can find it here. I guarantee hours of fascinating reading and inspiration!

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Monday, November 15, 2010 1:10:55 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [3]  |