Wow, it’s been a while. Time to catch up.
I’m currently working on a new preemie pattern for boys. This one will be a little bubble. No smocking, but it will have a little collar and I thought a touch of Drawn Thread Work would be a perfect little touch to add. It’s always special when a mom or grandma can stitch a little bit of her heart into something so I started doing my research.
It started with a photo…but for some insane reason I didn’t save it! Now I only have my memory of a little square design that kind of looks like Reticella work. Very vague and enough to haunt my thoughts until I could google as much as I could and ask my dear friend Lori, who’s done much more embroidery than I. She advised that Reticella and Hardanger might be too bulky for what I had in mind and advised me to stick with Drawn Thread.
I stumbled on Mary Corbet’s wonderful website and she had a link to the Antique Pattern Library. What a rabbit hole that can be! But I disciplined myself and stuck to my research using the Drawn Thread book by DMC on the Antique Pattern Library website. Here is the link:
http://www.antiquepatternlibrary.org/pub/PDF/DMCDrawn1.pdf
Have fun! But don’t forget to come back and read the rest of the post! Haha. Then I went through my own library, but I only had some books on Pulled Thread and Ruskin Lace Work as well as an odd little book that illustrates all kinds of stitches for all of these open and counted thread types of embroidery.
Nothing popped out and said “Stitch Me Now”. The line drawings were a little bland, and the old fashioned illustrations from the antique DMC really didn’t light a fire in by brain.
More searching, this time through Etsy and I was amazed to find this little gem! And not a PDF, but the real book! The listing said it is from the 1930s but there’s no copyright.
It’s the second part of the book at the Antique Pattern Library. It’s a wonderful book but still no solutions popped out at me.
Then, I cleaned my sewing room! Eureka!
I picked up a little shopping bag and my problem was solved. Inside were two little doilies that I bought when I went to the craft show and antique show at the Schwenkfelder Museum with my dear friend Wanda.
What a wonderful day that was. An entire antique and vintage fair that featured textiles and everything involving a needle. They had all kinds of lovely antique sewing tools and linens that day and there in that bag was the perfect little design for my bubble. It has the lacy open look of Reticella but is delicate enough for use on a lightweight linen or batiste. And it’s not girly looking so Dad can relax haha. It’s small in scale and can stitch up quickly.
I quickly cross referenced the books I was looking through and found the instructions I needed to execute the stitches. The openwork square consists of wrapped bars and dove’s eye. And the border is in my DMC book from Etsy!
Now to practice. I have the itch to stitch.