clusterfrock - ClusterFrock
ClusterFrock

Modern Clothes Are Stupid

45 posts

Had A Last Minute Notion To Make An Elizabethan-inspired Embroidery Pattern To Celebrate The Eclipse.

Had A Last Minute Notion To Make An Elizabethan-inspired Embroidery Pattern To Celebrate The Eclipse.

Had a last minute notion to make an Elizabethan-inspired embroidery pattern to celebrate the eclipse. I originally thought of doing a coif pattern, but thought the eclipse would get lost in the folds of the cap, so I ultimately went with a sweet bag. Since it was cloudy throughout totality, I thought it would be fun to incorporate the stars & clouds embroidery from a c.1600 waistcoat at the Bath Fashion Museum. The sun design is inspired by various period illustrations of sun motifs, minus the face they always seemed to put on every sun/moon design because I just couldn't make it not look silly.

I have no idea what stitches I would use for this bag, since sweet bags tend to use all sorts of different stitches. The original stars & clouds design is in blackwork, but I haven't seen any evidence of blackwork used on sweet bags. I'd probably do the background in a black or darkest blue metallic gobelin stitch (also ahistorical, but pretty!), the clouds/stars in silver stem stitch, the corona and rays in satin stitch or plaited braid, and the moon in black detatched buttonhole or some other fill stitch. Or I'd do the entire thing in blackwork except the corona and rays of the sun, which I'd do in gilt, documentation be damned.

  • unique-communique
    unique-communique liked this · 8 months ago
  • abitofencouragement
    abitofencouragement reblogged this · 9 months ago
  • abitofencouragement
    abitofencouragement liked this · 9 months ago
  • gothicmagpie
    gothicmagpie reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • booooop-a-loop
    booooop-a-loop liked this · 10 months ago
  • ninjabunny
    ninjabunny liked this · 10 months ago
  • tammycess
    tammycess liked this · 10 months ago
  • lifesasundae
    lifesasundae liked this · 10 months ago
  • stylishanachronism
    stylishanachronism reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • stylishanachronism
    stylishanachronism liked this · 10 months ago
  • curiouscalembour
    curiouscalembour liked this · 10 months ago
  • submerged-in-stories
    submerged-in-stories liked this · 10 months ago
  • steh-lar-uh-nuhs
    steh-lar-uh-nuhs liked this · 10 months ago
  • ihaveahordingproblem
    ihaveahordingproblem reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • ihaveahordingproblem
    ihaveahordingproblem liked this · 10 months ago
  • bastardcircus
    bastardcircus liked this · 10 months ago
  • horsemage
    horsemage reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • horsemage
    horsemage liked this · 10 months ago
  • chic-a-gigot
    chic-a-gigot reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • glimpseofsanity
    glimpseofsanity liked this · 10 months ago
  • spirit-pyrite
    spirit-pyrite liked this · 10 months ago
  • fancyratlady
    fancyratlady reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • fancyratlady
    fancyratlady liked this · 10 months ago
  • sparrowsarecool
    sparrowsarecool liked this · 10 months ago
  • m-1-l-a-g-r-o-10-16
    m-1-l-a-g-r-o-10-16 liked this · 11 months ago
  • chic-a-gigot
    chic-a-gigot liked this · 11 months ago
  • killingjod
    killingjod liked this · 11 months ago

More Posts from Clusterfrock

8 years ago
Embroidery On The 18th Century Court Suit Is Moving Right Along! This Project Started Way Back In February
Embroidery On The 18th Century Court Suit Is Moving Right Along! This Project Started Way Back In February
Embroidery On The 18th Century Court Suit Is Moving Right Along! This Project Started Way Back In February

Embroidery on the 18th Century court suit is moving right along! This project started way back in February but had to be put aside because of how much schoolwork I was doing this semester. Now that school is out, I’m finally getting the chance to go back to it.

This suit is based on extant 18th Century court suits. The waistcoat is a cream duchess silk satin with cotton embroidery and metal spangles. So many spangles! I’m glad I have a fella that will let me make his clothes sparkly.

I’m hoping to finish up this week and finally begin the construction. I also need to make a new shirt for him before I can move on to the coat, so that’s in the queue, as well. Now to decide what embroidery pattern to use for the coat...


Tags :
10 months ago

A very useful resource!

Oh hey, do you know what time it is? It is highly specific resource time!

Today we have the Royal School of Needlework Stitch Bank! There are HUNDREDS of stitch types in the RSN Stitch Bank.

menu of "browse all stitches" "browse stitches by use" "browse stitches by structure" "search stitches by embroidery technique"

And more added regularly, let’s look at a recent addition

homepage "winter 2023, 25 Elizabethan Stitches"
25 round badge icons, each has a stitch name and a line drawing of the general stitch

I picked the first one in the 25 recently added Elizabethan stitches, the Elizabethan French Stitch

page for the Elizabethan French Stitch. shows a canvas with a lavender embroidery thread highlighting the stitch design
shows examples of recreated Elizabethan French Stitch and their source information

The stitch bank provides written and photo tutorials as well as a video option to learn to do it yourself. There are examples of the stitch in use, resources, references, everything but a needle and thread!

rsnstitchbank.org
RSN Stitchbank

rsnstitchbank.org

10 months ago

One of my favorites. Still planning to make my green version someday.

Yellow Silk Evening Dress With Oak Leaf Design
Yellow Silk Evening Dress With Oak Leaf Design
Yellow Silk Evening Dress With Oak Leaf Design

yellow silk evening dress with oak leaf design

c.1902

House of Worth

Fashion Museum of Bath

10 months ago

Happy National Bat Day! Here’s a happy little bat embroidery pattern from the 1632 pattern book “The Schole-House for the Needle.”

Happy National Bat Day! Heres A Happy Little Bat Embroidery Pattern From The 1632 Pattern Book The Schole-House

Tags :
8 years ago
Whipped Up A Quick Mantelet To Keep Me Warm At Yesterdays Georgian Picnic. The Outer Fabric Is A Champagne
Whipped Up A Quick Mantelet To Keep Me Warm At Yesterdays Georgian Picnic. The Outer Fabric Is A Champagne

Whipped up a quick mantelet to keep me warm at yesterday’s Georgian Picnic. The outer fabric is a champagne colored taffeta, and it has a warm fleece lining. I edged the entire thing with marabou to simulate fur. It was nice and warm in our cool fall weather!


Tags :