Friday, July 29, 2016

Hansel and Gretel

Lately I've been experimenting with whitework, redwork, and blackwork. I found a pattern created by Aimee Ray in Doodle Stiching and copied it, making a few changes. I used a maroon for most everything and coral (which looks peach in this picture) for a few of the details.

 To make certain details more precise, I used 2 or 3 ply, but for the lazy daisy stitches and the border I used the original 6 ply.
Hansel and Gretel and the trees are embroidered using the Back Stitch. A few minute details on their clothes, as shown in the picture above, are coral french knots, and the grass tufts are straight stitches. The leaves and the corners of the borders are lazy daisy stitches, and the border is a running stitch.

This can be used as a pleasant wall hanging, a pretty pillow cover, or hung in a frame on the wall. 

Hope you can get ideas/inspiration from my depiction of Hansel and Gretel!

-Avamae 

#hanselandgretel #doodlestitching #inspirationembroidery

Sunday, February 28, 2016

my favorite authors

I LOVE reading. Without books...there would be nothing to do before going to bed, or while eating a couple (hundred) chocolate chips, or...it just would be pretty lousy. 

I've mentioned a few of my favorite books/series, but I haven't suggested any authors, so - here goes.

#1: Charles Dickens

He is my all-time favorite author. Why? Great Expectations. A Tale of Two Cities. Little Dorrit. Nicholas Nickleby. A Christmas Carol. Oliver Twist. The Pickwick Papers. (Great Expectations is AWESOME, I would TOTALLY recommend listening to it on tape.) If you read about his life, by the way, you may realize that many characters in his books are created from actual people and actual experiences, like Fanny from Little Dorrit!

#2: Jane Austen

Yeah, we all knew she would pop up sometime. My favorite book of hers is Sense and Sensibility, but I always have enjoyed reading Emma, Persuasion, Pride and Prejudice, and Mansfield Park. (I started reading Northanger Abbey but got tired for the story to move along, sooooo...) It is interesting, by the way, that Jane Austen tended to write about lives of wealthier people, and mixed in the lives of poorer people, whereas Charles Dickens often wrote about a person in a financial strait who usually rises (Little Dorrit, Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol, Oliver Twist, Nicholas Nickleby, etc.)

#3: Lemony Snicket

At this point you probably wonder WHAT IN THE WORLD I'm thinking. Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, Lemony Snicket? However, I absolutely LOVE his style of writing! He really captures the action of the moment, doesn't slow things down with details (cough, cough, Charles Dickens, cough, cough, Jane Austen) and paints a picture in your mind of the scene. I love a Series of Unfortunate Events and All the Wrong Questions (both series)

Lemony Snicket is a pseudonym, the author's real name being Daniel Handler. He decided to use the name of the narrator as a pen name (hence the name Lemony Snicket). If you read the Series of Unfortunate Events, you will see what I mean when I list him as Author Number Three!

#4: C.S. Lewis

This amazing author has written a variety of books, from the realm of theology to the realm of fantasy, the most famous being the Chronicles of Narnia and the Screwtape Letters. However, I must address a book that very well could have made C.S. Lewis jump from Author Number Four to Author Number One:
Till We Have Faces
This is the most AMAZING book ever, based of off the famous myth about Cupid and Psyche, narrated by Psyche's sister. It is a total MUST-READ! If you don't go home and order this book from the library immediately after reading this post, I WILL KNOW! 

Hope ya'll liked this post. Read Till We Have Faces. Love reading.

-Avamae

#TillWeHaveFaces
#Lovereading
#LemonySnicket
#GreatExpectations

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

embroidery types

I know embroidery is not for everyone. However, not everybody knows that there is more to embroidery than a few stitches on some fabric. There are all sorts of beautiful types! Here are a few of types (many I have not attempted):

Applique

When I first looked at this particular "category" of embroidery, I thought that it was simply sewing (which, by the way, I used to despise). However, it is actually a combination! 


Note: This is not mine, It is a completely RANDOM example of applique, :D

Whitework

This, to me, is not exactly my FAVORITE type of embroidery. It seems a little boring and uncolorful. But whatever floats your boat!


Note: This is ALSO not my doing! Also, there is such thing as blackwork and redwork.

Stumpwork

Stumpwork is another thing that I do NOT do - not because I don't like it, though, but because it's just too darn HARD! But, if you like a good challenge, this is for you:


Reminds me of applique, a bit. 

#stumpwork #redwork #TOOHARDFORAVAMAE!!!

-Avamae :)