Category Archives: antique/vintage textiles

Embroidered Antique Buttons

I was so pleased with the finished look of the buttons on my granddaughter’s shadow smocked Easter dress.  It was a stroke of luck that they surfaced  as I pillaged through my bag of pearl buttons.  I had forgotten all about them.

Purchased many years ago at an antique mall with an extensive needlework/notions booth, I had no plan for these interesting buttons.  There is no shank, just threads wrapped from side to side, as if the fibers were stitched over a ring.  But the ivory color seemed to work for this dress with the ivory lace, entredeux and featherstitching. Continue reading

Antique Textiles~Estate Sale

guest towel green wide

guest or tea towel with fil tire’, surface embroidery, applique’ and scalloped cutwork edge.

 

There are so many lovely and interesting textiles from the previous  Once-in-a-Lifetime Estate Sale  that they deserve another post.  This is part two.

But before you look further, I want to apologize for the boring layout of these beauties.  I’m struggling with Laurel’s Easter dress and don’t have much time.  So they are simply laid out, plain and simple.

The first is this towel, which was probably for the use of guests.I love all the details and embellishments.

gt tea greem

 

Of the same style and quality is a yellow version.

guest towel yello long

The linen is so fine that the patio table top shows through both layers of the folded towel.

guest towel cats

Notice the kitten Binche lace and the tiny pinstitch holes.

The peach linen towel above was probably in a children’s bathroom.  The kitten Binche “picture” lace is very childlike.

I have a lot of antique Binche lace that I will soon put up for sale.  The patterns are not all juvenile, but include elephants, fisher boys, deer, tennis players and even King Tut.  A few are shown below.

 

Binche lace~~1. Billy Goats Gruff, 2. tennis players, 3. deer, 4. baby chicks, 5. fisher boys, 6. roosters, 7. King Tut, 8. St. George's dragon

Binche lace~~1. Billy Goats Gruff, 2. tennis players, 3. deer, 4. baby chicks, 5. fisher boys, 6. roosters, 7. King Tut, 8. St. George’s dragon

 

Next is a pretty 16″ centerpiece.

 

coronation cord centerpiece

coronation cord centerpiec

 

Coronation cord has fascinated me since I first saw it.  It came in several sizes and many colors.  It is simply couched in place, but renders the look of padded satin or bullion stitches.

Continue reading

Once-in-a-lifetime Estate Sale Shopping Spree

“Almost 20 years ago, they  (the lace portraits shown below) were purchased at an estate sale,  where they were pinned to a sheet of cardboard.  If any interest is expressed, I’ll write a post about that once-in-a-lifetime textile shopping spree.  Occasionally, I still dream about it!” 

antique-lace-portraits-FI

 

This quote is from an earlier post about these antique lace portraits. Readers did ask for the story.  So let me tell you………

This was the most amazing estate sale I had ever seen, or ever will again.  It was truly a once-in-a-lifetime shopping opportunity to acquire beautiful things.

First, a few details about one of my finds at that sale, a set of 6 placemats and napkins with a matching table runner.

 

blueSW placematw napkin

Shadow embroidered placemat with surface embroidery and hemstitching.

 

The shadow embroidery on this luncheon set is absolutely flawless.  Worked in two shades of blue, the stitches are so tiny and so regularly spaced that it’s hard to believe this is handwork.

 

blue SWplacemat Lcorner

 

The surface embroidery is equally remarkable.

 

blueSW placemat

 

The set of six placemats and napkins includes a table runner.  With my Blue Willow china,  it makes a pretty setting for lunch.  For tea, flow blue cups are elegant.  My 7 yo granddaughter Laurel and I enjoy having tea on the breakfast porch with these cups.  Robert, 6, sometimes joins us but prefers a no-nonsense Gator mug.

 

blue flow cup stand

 

So here is the story about how this all came about.  My mother’s friend, Marybelle, had a daughter who did estate sales and auctions in New England.  She didn’t liquidate little Ma & Pa farms or cottages but rather huge estates with names like Rockefeller or DuPont.  Mind you, I don’t know the surnames, but the implication was that they were of this status, rich and/or famous.

 

Suzanne bought these, then duplicated the technique. The article is featured in Creative Needle magazine.

 

The story goes that the 4 or 5 adult children had already stripped the house of  everything that interested them, which apparently was the bulk of the mansion’s  contents.   Then, at the auction, more than $5 million worth of items were sold.  The leftovers were sent to Marybelle, a well-connected Southern lady, who was to offer them to her friends.  Fortunately for me, my mother was one of her friends. Continue reading

Antique Lace Portraits

antique lace portraits 2

Of all my textile treasures, these lace portraits are among my very favorites.  To be perfectly honest, I know absolutely nothing about how they were created. Do you know?  I would really appreciate any information you could share.

 

antique lace portraits FI

 

The background/field surrounding the busts appears to be a sort of tatting or crochet.   The fill pattern in parts of  each figure remind me of Battenburg techniques.  But for all I know, there may be an obscure, obsolete needleart for creating such stitched images.  I can say with certainty that they were made by hand.

 

antique lace portrait  guy2

 

The placement of the intricate stitch patterns create a portrait so clear that you might recognize this regal personage or his ancestors if you had bumped into them at the latest royal wedding. Continue reading

Vintage Rick Rack Lace and Free Patterns

1-rick rack pillow

The pillow is red silk dupioni trimmed with vintage rick rack lace and antique buttons. The center panel with monogram was stitched on an antique linen damask napkin.

I’ve always been enchanted by old textiles, laces in particular.Rick rack lace is one of the most unique and intriguing in my collection.

RickRackLace blue

It sounds so tacky! Certainly it can be and undoubtedly some good-taste challenged lady in the 40’s or 50’s created some unattractive yardage using this technique.But it can be so charming, if not delicate.

RickRackLace green

Rick rack lace seems to have been very popular for towel and pillowcase edgings.In fact, I have a length of it in red and white that was obviously used on a pillow slip. The sturdiness of this trim makes it very suitable for heavily laundered items.

RickRackLace yellow

This white length is my favorite. I would love to have enough to edge a baby blanket, but instead will have to settle on using it for trim on doll dresses for granddaughter Laurel’s American Girl Molly. She was a miss of the 40’s so her time frame is appropriate for its use. I envision it around the raised waist of a velveteen dress. The texture contrast would be very pleasing, I think.

RickRackLace white crop

This 1952 needlework book includes several patterns/directions for making rick rack lace.

RickRack Lace booklet

While the photo showing styles is certainly representative of the popular color waves of that time, the lace is very intricate and would be beautiful, I think, in neutrals or pastels.

rickrack lace book pics

If I could really crochet, I’d try making some lengths of one or two patterns. I wish one of you readers would make some and let us know how it goes.

UPDATE: I found this site with wonderful pictures of rick rack lace.Check it out.

Here are the directions. If you are unsuccessful in copying the image, post a comment requesting me to e-mail it to you.

This is my White Wednesday post at Faded Charm.

RickRack Lace dir1

Lunch Linen and Free Mary Frances eBook

NEWS FLASH!  The  Mary Frances Adventures Among the Thimble People sewing book is still available as a free download from this fabulous homeschooler site.  Not only that but now you can also download–for free–the Mary Frances Knitting and Crocheting  Book  These were promoted as one-day only freebies.  But apparently, they remain on the site for some time.

This week has been filled with delightful visits from  two South Carolina friends.  First, Terri Click (The Thrifty Needle blog) of Conway arrived after teaching in Orlando.  I’ll share more of that visit in a future post.  She snapped some pictures and  has posted photos of my sewing room   (gulp….) on her blog.

Then just yesterday my high school friend Carole of Bluffton stopped by with her husband on their way to DisneyWorld.

Having planned to serve lunch on the breakfast porch, I thought it was a perfect opportunity to use this charming vintage tablecloth, which is just the right size.  It teamed up nicely with my favorite, everyday Blue Willow china and this robust African violet.  When Suzanne Sawko gave me the pot, the plant was no more than three tiny rooted starts.  Now it overflows the container and blooms profusely, nonstop.  I’m so pleased with it. Continue reading

White Hankies

WW-handkerchiefs-all

This image has been darkened to show details of the white-on-white embroidery.

 

The opportunity to post a White Wednesday blog along with others at Faded Charm motivated me to plunder through my handkerchief collection again.  As I said in an earlier post, there are few genres of needlework that include so many wonderful techniques as handkerchiefs.

 

 

WW-handkerchiefs-M-crop

 

In a relatively small area, spectacular stitching is often combined with extraordinary edgings.  These beauties are tiny treasures.

 

WW-handkerchiefs-diagonal-all

Note the unusual shaping of the linen and the delicate handmade edge. 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