Thursday 30 May 2013

Victorian edging patterns

I realised at the last Victorian weekend that I needed more samples using Victorian tatting patterns.


 Top two are really simple off the top of my head patterns and probably really similar to ones I've read somewhere in the various old tatting books.  They're using ecru thread not yellow - that's just my photo :)

The bottom one is from the Mlle Riego Royal Tatting book and is called "Lilly of the Valley pattern". This is my first attempt at this pattern and it even features the first bit of crochet I've done in years!  I felt my crochet was a bit too wobbly so on the right half of the top edging I've gone for a tatted chain instead.  It will hopefully look less wobbly if I press it.

Wednesday 15 May 2013

In the mood for tatting this week


After yesterday's homage to women's suffrage here's some more tatting I did this evening.


At the top is a variant on yesterday's pattern only this time done the normal way with just one thread. It's a bit wriggly at the moment because it hasn't been damped and flattened yet.

At the bottom is and the right : a 2-layer flower pattern from cariad-tatting.co.uk, and on the left is a variant on Rose and Leaf from This 'n' Tat - it's supposed to have chains but I left bare thread instead so that I could do it with one shuttle.

All these are thread that arrived today - Carnivale and Purple Twist both Lizbeth.

Yesterday one of my friends pointed out that Green White Violet for Give Women Votes is a bit of a myth. She says
From 1908 the WSPU adopted the colour scheme of purple, white and green: purple symbolised dignity, white purity, and green hope. These three colours were used for banners, flags, rosettes and badges, and appeared in newspaper cartoons and postcards. Mappin & Webb, the London jewellers, issued a catalogue of suffragette jewellery for Christmas 1908.
In 1909 the WSPU presented specially commissioned pieces of jewellery to leading suffragettes Emmeline Pankhurst and Louise Eates. Some Arts and Crafts jewellery of the period incorporated the colours purple, white and green using enamel and semi-precious stones such as amethysts, pearls, and peridots. However jewellery that incorporated these stones was already quite common in women's jewellery during the late 19th century, before 1903 and could not be connected with the suffragettes, before the WSPU adopted the colours.
However in my piece of tatting the colours do stand for Give Women Votes :) 
(WSPU stands for Womens Social and Political Union)

I'm fighting the urge to order yet more thread already - I hadn't noticed the Scottish Thistle variegated lizbeth thread which should be much easier to use for purple/white/green tatting than trying to juggle three separate threads. Postage costs have gone up lately now so placing a small order is too expensive so it'll have to wait until I succumb to more colours.

Tuesday 14 May 2013

In memory of Womens Suffrage

Just over a week ago I was acting the role of a suffragette so I decided it would be nice to do some tatting in suffrage colours - Green White and Violet which stand for Give Women Votes.
(and before I forget - a link to some photos of that weekend courtesy of Lincoln's local newspaper)

I got the threads yesterday and after a lot of thinking yesterday evening this is what I came up with this evening:

It's 3 cm wide. The threads are all lizbeth 20 and are Leaf Green, Natural and Antique Violet light. Three threads, three shuttles, 6 ends to sew in :(
The green isn't as bright in real life as in this picture.

Now I've got this out of the way I can get on with what I should have been doing!

Sunday 12 May 2013

Recent tatting

I said I had done some tatting and here it is...


At the top is some Etruscan braid from a Mlle Riego book - it's also in a Mary Konior book where she gives the directions for the corner.  This is going to be the edging for a tray cloth for Victorian/Edwardian re-enactment.  It's in size 16 Puppets Eldorado thread.

In the middle is more Etruscan braid, this time in size 40 Anchor mercer. This is the piece I was tatting in public over last weekend (a bank holiday weekend) during the Victorian Weekend at Lincoln Castle.  This will probably become trimming for the cuffs of my next Edwardian-style blouse.

At the bottom is Curds and Whey from one of Mary Konior's books, again in size 40 Anchor mercer.  After the first few repeats I switched to front-side/back-side tatting and that is making it lie much flatter than the first portion.

Friday 10 May 2013

quiet month for blogging

This blog has been rather quiet this month...

I have done some tatting.  I took part in the Victorian Weekend at Lincoln Castle this bank holiday weekend just past. I don't have any pictures myself but I have managed to find this picture on flickr where if you look carefully you can see some tatting in my hand (I'm seated second from left). I spent a fair part of the weekend tatting and succeeded in getting people interested enough to ask about it - I was quite impressed by how many knew it was Tatting.  I'm hoping that some other photos will turn up outside of facebook so that I can link to them.

Because of the lack of pictures in this post here are some links to some useful videos that I came across today

First from yarnplayer's blog: Tatting video: reverse work, join, chain, and ring. This is a nice clear video showing how to do a chain.

Then via Le blog de Frivole: Marie Smith's Method for split chains