Showing posts with label Agnes Scott 1810. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Agnes Scott 1810. Show all posts

Friday, April 19, 2013

Lots of Eye Candy from Members of SGR

Here are photos of some of the wonderful projects stitched by members of the Sampler Guild of the Rockies.

First is Jen showing off her Friends in Stitches Sewing Case.  Jen took this class a few years ago with the Lake Michigan Sampler Guild when she lived in Chicago.




Next is Joanna with her completed A Needleworker's Sampler Huswif.  Joanna took this class several years ago while living in Michigan.



Next is Patti with her Paradise Lost.  Last week Patti posted a photo of her project on Facebook and got lots of inquiries from stitchers looking for the design, which is one of my early ones.  Yes, it is still available.  Just ask your LNS to contact me to get a copy.


And here is Patti with Eliza's Pinpillow.  This is a complimentary design that can be found on my website.


And here is Joanna again, this time with her Agnes Scott, a Scottish reproduction sampler.  Joanna added her own name left of the house.


And here she is with her Ackworth Friendship Book.



This is the carrying bag Joanna made for her book.  The  package this product has charts and directions for assemblying the book and also atemplate and assembly directions for the bag.


Valerie also brought her Ackworth Friendship Book for me to see.



And here is Leigh with her Ackworth Friendship Book.  I stitched my model using only one thread color, but Leigh used several different thread and linen colors for her beautiful book.


Here is Loni with Quaker Sampling I.  I first met Loni years ago at one of the needlework tradeshows.  She has since closed her shop.


Here is Theresa with her A Most Noble Pursuit.  This was a collaboration sampler between ten designers.  Theresa chose to stitch eight of the ten blocks for her version.  Candy Scott, who is one of the two designers for The Workbasket, was at the Sunday meeting, so I asked her if she would be in the photo also.  The Workbasket's design is in the upper left corner, and mine is in the upper right.


Jean, Nancy, and Janice surprised their friend Sandy by stitching A Petite Sampling Etui for her.  This was a collaboration project I did with three other designers.  What a thrill it must have been for Sandy to receive such a wonderful gift from her friends.



Here are photos of a pincushion Joyce made using some of my Quaker designs.  Look at the cute beaded edge she added.



Two of the ladies who were in the Long May She Wave class on Thursday bought their pieces Sunday so we could see the wonderful progress they've made.  Both were nearly finished with the stitching.  I bet we'll soon be seeing photos of their completed sewing cases.

Here is Mary.


And here is Janet.  Her friends say she gets so much stitching done because she always seems to have a needle in her hand.


Thank you to all who brought such wonderful projects for Show and Tell.  I think there will soon be more photos posted at the Sampler Guild of the Rockies website, so check it out.

And then, all too soon, the retreat was over.  Before parting ways, we took one final photo.  Here I am with Judy, the guild president, and Kathy, the guild's program chairperson.


Thanks, everyone, for making my Sampler Guild of the Rockies visit such a memorable one!

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Agnes Scott, 1810 by Denise

Several years ago, Denise DeMore from Duxbury, Massachusetts stitched Agnes Scott, a Scottish reproduction sampler. I saw Denise’s beautiful sampler in person when I stayed in her lovely home. I asked her if she would send a photo for the blog and also write something.

Denise wrote, “Agnes was the stitch-along one year in Ellen's newsletter, and I was not familiar at the time with her reproductions or other designs. I quickly became a fan though. I had been stitching since 1997 and decided to do this stitch along as I loved reproduction samplers and the red and green lettering caught my eye along with the fact that I love houses in samplers. Another good reason was that the monthly stitch along would help me stay on track. Alas I have to admit I did not finish it in one year. It took me well into the second year to complete but I stuck with it and am very proud of my accomplishment.

“I remember when I first decided to do this piece. A woman, Jo Fornier, put me onto this reproduction by Ellen. We had conversed through Ellen's newsletter several times and found we lived near each other though we had never met. We agreed to meet at The Sampler in Plymouth, Massachusetts one Saturday morning, to first go for breakfast and to discuss what we were working on. Jo was fabulous. She brought her Agnes Scott on a scroll frame and wrapped in a pillow case. It was gorgeous and I fell in love with the colors of the alphabets and that scroll work around them made it jump out to me. Jo insisted I should try something this big.

“Shortly afterwards, Agnes became the stitch along in Ellen's newsletter. It was the perfect way to get me motivated. I went back to the Sampler Shop. Back then Elizabeth Creeden owned the shop. Based on what I was telling her I wanted to do, she began asking me questions which I really couldn't answer. She quickly called Ellen on the phone and discussed the color of the linen. Was the color supposed to match the original as it looked today or was it to match the original when it had originally been stitched more then two hundred years ago? I had no idea what they were talking about and I was only hearing one side of the conversation, Elizabeth's.

“I was fairly new to stitching and had only completed a few samplers from charts that I had purchased at a small local shop which had recently closed. I couldn't believe you could just call up a designer on a Saturday and speak with her about the piece. Elizabeth assured me it was alright and proceeded with the conversation. Elizabeth, after she finished speaking with Ellen, quickly pulled everything together for me with the exception of a few silk threads and the chenille thread that she had to order. But I was well on my way to starting the piece. I was so relieved Elizabeth could figure the whole thing out and get me started.

“Each month I would try to stay up with the group but my work travel schedule interfered at times. I had mostly done cross stitch and had recently learned Algerian eyelets. But that was about it. I loved doing the satin stitches and the running and back stitches to make the curly cues around the letters and other places. I stayed as close to the pattern as possible as I didn't want to make any mistakes though I am sure there are some along the way. I am sure I had to rip out and start over in places, but interestingly enough I don't remember any of that. And I guess that is why I have completed several other large samplers and interestingly enough have been injecting some smalls here and there to give me that since of accomplishment. I hope you enjoy seeing Agnes completed.”

(The photo below is an enlargement of the bottom center.
You can see the chenille grass on either side of the door.)

Denise did a beautiful job stitching the sampler. She also does her own framing. Denise, I hope you enjoyed stitching this sampler and that you now enjoy having it on the wall of your dining room.

The original sampler belongs to my friend Moira Brown, who asked if Tom and I would like to reproduce it. Of course, we said “yes!”

The sampler was already conservation framed, so we chose our colors from the front of the piece. Besides the chart, the product package includes a photograph of the antique sampler and also an essay on Scottish samplers that Moira wrote for us.

Thanks, Denise, for sending photos of your completed Agnes Scott for my blog.