Category Archives: antique textiles

Florida Fall ~Stitching and Decorating

Everyone, it seems, loves fall. The stores are chock full of home dec items, the embroidery sites are brimming with new autumn designs and the department store displays show garments in brilliant golds, browns and orange.

In central Florida, fall brings cooler temperatures, ripening citrus, and the county fair.  I love them all, but my favorite is the show put on by the romantic Golden Rain Trees.  As a child, I watched Elizabeth Taylor in the movie, Raintree County, and fantasized about someday seeing such a tree.

All these years, I’ve remembered the theme song, sung by Nat King Cole.  I find myself humming it  when the golden showers begin.  The petals and pollen  cover the grass like a yellow carpet and are followed by vibrant rust colored seed pods in huge clusters. Continue reading

Embroidered Italian Trousseau Sheet

Following the lead of Jeannie B. and other bloggers, I’ve boarded the White Wednesday wagon, posting about something white each Wednesday.  This is my first WW post. See more White Wednesday at Faded Charm.

 

Italian Trouss bedside

 

Twenty years ago, I was strolling the aisles of a huge antique show when I spotted this extraordinary bed linen.  Tied up with a blue satin ribbon,  folded neatly with the monogram centered, the creamy white sheet called out,  “Janice!  Take me home!”  So I did I think my husband even heard it, because he declared that it would do for my birthday present.

 

Italian Trousseau monogram

 

It is incredibly beautiful,  product of countless hours with needle and thread,  all the while dreaming of future marital bliss.  The padded satin stitch monogram and all the surface embroidery is so raised, so dimensional.

 

Italian Troussembclose

 

The eyelets are perfectly executed, with not a whisker showing.  The embroidery flows from one side to the other on the 84″ wide linen sheet.Below, intricate hemstitching adds another delicate texture.

 

Italian Trouss hemstitching

 

The sheet’s 2″ hem at the foot is done by hand, with tiny, nearly invisible stitches.

Whether or not it is true, the history of this beauty intrigued me.  Of course, this could be one of those “the queen slept here” stories, but I choose to believe it.  It surely beats a “Made in China” label.

A young Italian bride and her groom, it was said,  sailed to America for their honeymoon and decided to remain here in the Land of Opportunity.  They intended to have the bride’s hope chest sent over once they were settled.

For whatever reason, that never happened and the chest remained in Italy for more than 60 years.  After the death of the aged needleworker, her granddaughter made a pilgrimage to Italy.  Her goals were to see the land of her ancestors and to claim the chest about which her grandmother had spoken so frequently.

The story goes that the chest was loaded with this sheet and several others, as well as a treasure trove of household linens.  None had ever been used. Somehow this sheet and one other (already sold and reportedly far more spectacular than this one!) fell into the hands of  the antique dealer.  And from hers to mine.

If ever I were to feel a shortage of beauty in my surroundings, I could just pull this out.  Some work of the hands is as breathtaking as the work of Mother Nature.

 

Iris Tea Linens

Earl Grey tea and banana bread served in the potting shed

Earl Grey tea and banana bread served in the potting shed

This set of  six linen napkins and placemats is so beautiful that using them, either to pamper myself or entertain special friends, always makes me appreciative of the needleworker’s skill.  They were purchased from an estate sale and were estimated to be vintage 1940.

By virtue of my friend Suzanne Sawko’s definition  of “antique” as something that is older than she is, I declare these linens to be the real deal.  But using Suzanne’s standard has made it harder and harder for me to find genuine antiques!

Iris Linen placematcorner

placemat corner

Continue reading

Unique Techniques ~ Vintage Daygown

 

Well loved daygowns and roses are two of my favorite things. This Bright Future climber had a 5th rose in this cluster.

Well loved daygowns and roses are two of my favorite things. This Bright Future climber had a 5th rose in this cluster.

 

At first glance, this antique daygown is sweet but offers nothing noteworthy. Upon closer examination, however, there are techniques and features that make me wish I knew more about it.  I bought it on eBay for reasons I don’t remember.

smocking close roses

One of the first things that caught my attention is the pale, pale pink smocking (probably faded with time) which appears to have been stitched without the benefit of a pleater.  It seems unlikely that iron on dots were used, as the gossamer sheer fabric likely would have refused to surrender this intrusion, even after multiple launderings. Continue reading

At Liberty

Yes, at liberty to start another project!  The  sundress is finished at last.  Hurrah!

At Liberty All

 

What was expected to be a quick and easy project became a career, entailing  continuing education, extra hours, supply problems, and lowered performance expectations.

This all started with a child’s vintage filet crochet yoke.  Purchased at least 15 years ago, it was saved for a someday granddaughter. Now, I have the granddaughter, she is the right size and I was ready to go.  All it needed was a smocked  Liberty of London tana lawn skirt.   How hard could it be?

Before I got very far on the smocking, I thought it would be nice to add Florence Roberson’s smocked puffy pockets.  It took two full days to locate the pattern.

 

smocked-pocket-finished

 

Before I pleated the pockets, the top may edge needed to be finished with a tiny hem or trimmed with lace.  Since I was using a crocheted yoke, a crocheted edge seemed in order.   My first and last crochet project was a pastel granny square baby blanket for my newborn daughter in 1978.  Hmmmmm….so I pulled out some how-to needlework books and learned some simple, basic crochet.  Continuing education is good!

NOTE: The links above take you to  earlier post about the sundress and  pockets, which are just sweet as pie.

 

At Liberty smock front

 

The skirt is smocked with Florence Roberson’s plate Diamonds, by Ellen McCarn.  Smocking on Liberty or any print presents the challenge of achieving enough contrast without “fighting” with the print. Continue reading

Beach Portrait Dress and Vintage Skirt

BeachDressC.png

Children’s Corner Louise, modified

 

Judy Day attended Lezette Thomason’s Children’s Corner Sewing School in June and had a fabulous time.  She just finished this classic white beach portrait dress which was one of the projects.   Any beach would be enhanced with Judy’s pretty seven-year old  granddaughter, Courtney, wearing this dress.

Children’s Corner pattern Louise was redrafted for this garment.  Judy reported that it is embellished with 12 tucks on the front, 18 on the back,  three gathered tiers with tucks, separated by lace. She thoroughly enjoyed stitching this project.

BeachDressvintall

I fell in love with the dress and the idea of a beach portrait for my own seven year-old granddaughter, Laurel.  Instantly, I remembered this exquisite white skirt, purchased at our church bazaar several years ago for no good reason other than its loveliness and potential.  Of course, I wonder on what occasions the  original owner with her 22″ waist wore this elaborate skirt.  Vintage textiles always pique my curiosity.

Continue reading

Antique Crazy Patch Quilt

In the crazy quilt of life, I’m glad you’re in my block of friends. Author Unknown

old quilt

We don’t come to our cabin in North Carolina as frequently as we did before the grandchildren were born.  After a lengthy absence from my favorite getaway, seeing the old treasures I placed  there is a little like seeing old friends. This quilt is an old favorite that brings back fond memories of estate sale-ing with my friend Suzanne.  One of those sales is where I found this oldie.

I love antique textiles–good, bad and mediocre.  In the eyes of an expert  appraiser, this old crazy patch quilt is charming at best and crude at worst.  But I love it for its character, idiosyncrasies and history, about which I can only speculate.

This beauty is more representative of the classic crazy patch style.  It is obvious Quilt1that the cabin quilt is extremely primitive in comparison.

Crazy patch quilting, you might know, became the needlework rage in America between 1870 and 1880, though historically its origins go back as far as 1160.  A brief overview of its history and progress as a legitimate form of needlework can be read here.   http://www.quiltropolis.net/articles/crazy-quilts.aspair.

Continue reading

Liberty Tana Lawn Sundress

 

This is my handwork project for our “vacation” time here in the mountains.  I have two antique, crocheted child sized yokes, one of which will be joined to the smocked Liberty of London skirt.  When Laurel arrives in a few days, she will try them on to see which fits best.

I’m considering adding two little smocked pouch pockets and edging them with bits of crochet I have at home.  Many, many years ago, in the SAGA newsletters, Florence Roberson’s pattern for such a pocket was published.  I will pull that out if I decide to include the pockets. Continue reading

Courtney’s First Communion Dress

Courtneyporchcrop

 

Sewing for children and grandchildren is a true labor of love.  But like birthing a baby, some labors are longer and harder than others.  Always though, the resulting product is worth the effort.

 

CStairscrop

 

 

First communion dresses rank right up there with christening gowns in the expenditure  of labor and love. With the able assistance of her mother, Wanda Stewart, the ensemble that Judy Day created  for her granddaughter Courtney is the result of months of stitching as well as proof positive of  immeasurable grandmotherly love.

The set grew to include so many items—dress, slip, purse, garment bag, hanger, headpiece and Bible cover.  The many interesting and intricate details will require more than one post, so please come back for the final installment.  Each piece is exquisite, so you won’t want to miss any of it.  Continue reading

Antique Needlework Catalogue

Needlework catalogue resting on hand embroidered placemats and napkins, circa 1940.

Needlework catalogue resting on hand embroidered placemats and napkins, circa 1940.

Have you ever looked through antique or vintage needlework catalogues?  I highly recommend it–they are a treasure trove of information and inspiration.ModernMiss

The Simplicity Needlework Catalogue from 1947, shown above, is one of my favorites.  Stitchers of that time were not so different from those of today.

The subject tabs  show the topics to be very similar to the topics included in contemporary needlework magazines and pattern books.

ideas

“…Pick a basket full of colorful flowers to add a dainty touch to your trousseau linens–they’re just the thing to give as gifts…”

 

Children

Aside from the value of dating a pattern or style of embroidery, the catalogues are a rich source of designs applicable to machine or hand embroidery today.    Continue reading