Archive for the ‘Designer Information’ Category

Somewhere Warm to Wander If the Winter Wonderland Gets Old

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

Things change so fast in this online world of ours that making a comprehensive list of cross stitch related links and keeping it up to date is far from an easy task … but Marilyn’s Links has made a great start!

With all kinds of resources such as cross stitch freebies, bulletin boards, needlework shops, designers’ web pages, fabric and fiber manufacturers, frame sources, finishing ideas and tutorials, and stitchers’ blogs and photo albums, Marilyn’s Links has plenty to keep you busy for the rest of the year — even if you feel like hiding for the rest of the year and ignoring the holidays altogether like I do.

Marilyn’s Links also includes similar information for quilters and scrapbookers … and even has some great links dedicated to recipes, book lovers, and other such goodies.

So take some quiet time for yourself this holiday season and relax with your beverage of choice at Marilyn’s Links!

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You’ll Love This Apolitical Blog!

Friday, November 30th, 2007

Shepherd’s Bush (Blogroll) recently started a blog which no doubt will draw some interesting traffic considering its title: Bush Blog. Designer Tina Richards noted right off the bat in her first post that the title is subject to change.

Meanwhile, although INN’s focus isn’t politics, I am certainly not apolitical or afraid to speak my mind, as you have no doubt noticed. Having believed since he was sworn in that America needs to prune its shrubbery (and that by the time we got home from the market with our purchase, only to discover we’d been handed a different bush than the one we actually chose, but dang it, the receipt is nowhere to be found — yes, I’m one of THOSE people as well, ha ha), I’d really love to see how one of the most popular needlework designers (and shops) on the planet would handle some things. I think they’ve already got a good start on world peace! :D

Anyway, back to Bush Blog … Tina Richards has so far been the author, and her good intentions are not just to update Bush Blog (Blogroll) at least once a week, but also to do so at the beginning of the week. So far, she has made three timely posts, so you can easily catch up on the entire blog and, with good fortune, stay up to date with it. :D

Additionally, if you can manage to be in the neighborhood of Ogden, Utah where Shepherd’s Bush’s retail shop is located, today and/or Saturday, November 30th and December 1st, and if you are at all interested in learning needle felting, you could have the opportunity to learn it from Judy Bielec of Mosey ‘n Me (Blogroll). Just look at these amazing projects you’d get to begin creating.

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Needle felting makes me wish I weren’t allergic to wool and even has me contemplating the idea of wearing rubber gloves to do an entire project.

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Needle felting, at least the way Judy Bielec does it, is truly artwork — you end up with a piece reminiscent of sculptured clay, but instead of clay, the material is fiber. What could possibly be more fantastic?

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Mermaid Lovers Unite!

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

Ellen Chester of With My Needle (Blogroll) has come up with a special design for the many cross stitchers whose hearts have been captured by the fish-tailed goddesses of the sea. Maidens of the Sea is a scissor fob and sewing case set which comes with two carved fish threadwinders and is charted for either a selection of silks from several different companies, or in DMC for the more frugal-minded among us.

No matter what you choose to stitch this design with, though, you’ll be charmed by different specialty stitches into creating ocean waves, seahorses, and lighthouses in Ellen’s mermaid tale …

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New Merry Cox!

Monday, November 26th, 2007

Merry Cox, who is as famous for her finishing techniques as she is for her beautiful stitching designs, has begun to put up her 2008 teaching schedule, and she has also put up some new teaching pieces on her website for your viewing pleasure …

Ophelia, Part 1 was new last year …

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… and is now joined by Ophelia, Part 2.

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But my favorite of the new pieces has to be A French Bonbon Box, which makes me hungry just looking at it!

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All I can say is YUM!!!

I would love to hear from any INN readers who have been fortunate enough to take any of these classes with Merry already … and if you’d care to share pictures of your stitching with us here through INN, I know other INN readers would just love to see them!

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When Hugs Disappear, Where Do They Go?

Saturday, November 24th, 2007

Sadly for the rest of us, Kim Ritchie has decided to stop making Qsnap Huggers, at least temporarily. Family issues must take precedence for her, just as they must for all of us at times. I hope she will be back soon.

Until such time as Kim is able to return with her fantastic product, I will certainly enjoy hugging my QSnaps on a regular basis … and INN will continue to offer QSnap Huggers as contest prizes for a short while — until I run out of the current stash Kim so generously donated her time making for me, that is. So if you wanted a QSnap Hugger and didn’t get a chance to order one for whatever reason, please be sure to watch INN for upcoming contests … and don’t forget to participate in the current contest, too!

Also, be sure to stay tuned to INN for future announcements because you can be certain that if and when Kim is able to return to manufacturing Qsnap Huggers, I will very happily announce it here, and Kim will always receive my full support in her endeavors.

Please join me in wishing Kim and her family all the best at this time and in the future.

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Gay Ann Rogers’ 1st Annual E-Merchandise Week Almost Over …

Saturday, October 20th, 2007

Gay Ann Rogers has finished adding to the list of patterns, kits, and chartpacks she will be selling in her E-Merchandise Week, which officially began on October 15th.

Make sure you take a look
and contact her by October 21st, because your payment will need to be postmarked no later than October 22nd in order to be eligible for this once-in-a-year opportunity to obtain patterns from Gay Ann Rogers’ very rare collection of designs.

The final list of patterns for sale for this year are these:

Redwork Cat Sampler
Flower Girl
Strawberry Girl
Acorn Girl
Snowflake Girl
Beaded Halloween Heart
Grinning Kitty Heart

Gifts of Christmas Heart
Christmas Mittens Heart

Tuxedo Heart
Wedding Dress Heart

Pink Quartz Hearts, Pale and Bright (these are the same design, different colors)
Frosted Heart
Bruised Heart

Flower Needlebook and Scissors Fob

Patriotic Needlebook and Scissors Fob
Jeweled Geometric for a Goddess
Diamond Roundabout
Pearls and Peridot
Emerald Prisms
Ruby Prisms

Four small Needlepoint Samplers
Four small Cross Stitch Samplers

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Have You Hugged Your QSnaps Today?

Friday, October 19th, 2007

Kim Ritchie has developed a wonderful product she calls QSnap Huggers (Blogroll). What’s a QSnap Hugger? Well, I’m thrilled to tell you! I’ve been hugging my QSnaps for about a month now, and our relationship is better than ever. It’s true what they say — if you just reach out and give a hug, you start getting hugs back. Sometimes when you least expect them. Oh, sorry, wait … that’s from something I’ve been working on with my nephew.

On the other hand, I think it still applies; otherwise, I would have just deleted it outright. Or maybe not — you all know by now that I like to try being a little funny. Sometimes I fail. Sometimes I really fail. Anyway.

QSnap Huggers have several purposes. One is to help keep the edges of your stitching fabric from getting soiled, and as each QSnap Hugger is fully machine washable, it’s easy to make sure you always have a clean QSnap Hugger to use for your latest project!

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Another reason to use a QSnap Hugger is because if you hold your QSnap in hand, they may make it easier for you to grip the QSnap itself — whether because the fabric is softer, warmer, or doesn’t move as easily as the QSnap “snap.” Here’s the hug part — my hands feel like my QSnaps are hugging me back when I use my QSnap Huggers! Okay, maybe I’m pushing the humor a little, but they do help my hands feel better … and that means I can stitch longer — and THAT is worth what quite a few hugs feel like, no kidding around this time.

QSnap Huggers are also a great way to manage that extra 3 inches (more or less, as the case may be :) ) of fabric around our stitching; you just tuck all of that into your QSnap Hugger, which keeps it nicely neat and out of the way. No more accidentally stitching through any of that extra fabric (oh, come on, I can’t be the only one who still did that, even after over thirty years of stitching, until I learned my QSnaps like to be hugged just as much as I do?), no more constantly losing a thread from your fabric edge (or stitching it to the back of your project, which I also used to do frequently before I learned to hug my QSnaps), and no more of your favorite pets sitting on your lap or beside you thinking they ought to be able to use that piece of fabric sticking out in their direction for batting practice, as a chew toy, or even, as much as we’d love them to really give it a go, to practice stitching on themselves (funny how when you give them their own piece of fabric, their interest completely wanes once you are no longer seemingly attached to it). Can you tell that this is my favorite reason for QSnap Huggers?

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Finally, of course, we decorate all of our other stitching accouterments — our scissors get fobs, our tape measures get stitched cases, our needles get oodles and oodles of lovely stitched needlebooks … heck, some of us actually started justified starting started our scissor collections so we’d have a way to display our scissor fob collection. So why wouldn’t we also want to decorate our QSnaps?

They come in a variety of attractive fabrics depending on what Kim has available at the time — you might want an entire set which matches, as I did (and I plan to stitch pretty little labels for them so I can easily tell which size they’re for … although I’ll probably end up waiting until several designers have released patterns for just that before I manage to get around to it, knowing me!) or perhaps you’ll want different fabrics for each size of Hugger to help you tell them apart. Or, if you have some fabric of your own that you really like, Kim will work with you to have you mail her the fabric and give you individualized pricing.

Kim’s prices on her QSnap Huggers (using fabric she provides) are exceedingly reasonable:

6″ X 6″ - $5.00
6″ X 8″ - $5.50
6″ X 11″ - $5.75
8” X 8” - $5.75
8” X 11” - $6.00
11” X 11” - $6.75
11” X 17” - $7.50
17” X 17” - $8.50

 

For orders above $50, Kim also offers free shipping! Otherwise, her US shipping costs are just $1.50 for the first QSnap Hugger and $.50 for each one thereafter. International buyers are welcome and should contact Kim directly for more information on shipping costs. Kim accepts PayPal (sorry, no credit or debit cards), personal checks, money orders, or concealed cash as payment.

Additionally, because October is Breast Cancer Awareness month, Kim has picked out eleven pretty fabrics with some kind of pink goodness in them and promised to donate 20% of the price of every QSnap Hugger made in one of those gorgeous fabrics to Breast Cancer Charities. Isn’t that fantastic! Look at this cute pattern with the pink ribbons hidden among pretty flowers:

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The only problem is, we are already 86% of the way through the month of October, yet only $1.15 — yes, you read that right: one dollar and fifteen cents — has been raised toward Breast Cancer Charities. :(

Okay, actually, it’s just a little more than that because I just sent Kim a small order myself, but it’s for an odd size, so I’ll have to wait for a quote rather than being able to tell you exactly what the amount is that she’s raised toward Breast Cancer Charities. But I know we can do better than this.

Dear readers, I’m not making any money off of Independent Needlework News yet (I’m working on some ideas for that, including getting Google Ads up here, but first I want a different template … anyway, I digress [hi, Dennis, leave me a note if you get this :) ] … back to the point —>), or I would offer to match the total amount Kim raises to help the cause. Especially because it’s a bit more personal to me than any of us EVER want it to be, and I still can’t get any real answers around here (it’s those flunkie doctors in this state). Next year, I hope to be able to do some type of fundraiser myself, and in fact, I am already working on the plans for it. I believe when we cure breast cancer, we will also have found the cures for — or at least made huge strides toward finding the cures for our other swift and sure footed killers — ovarian cancer, uterine cancer, and cervical cancer, as well as all of those other horribly painful female conditions, (several of which I have lived with myself for many, many years) like endometriosis, adenomyosis, fibrocystic breasts, and uterine fibroid tumors that are considered “benign,” but which I know from experience certainly don’t feel anything like “kind.” In fact, at least some days, they feel as malignant and painful as any of those terrible female cancers — and that is one of the many reasons we have got to find the cure for breast cancer.

So please, don’t just think about hugging your QSnaps today … Do it, and help at the same time to make it possible for all women to hug our great grandmothers, our grandmothers, our mothers, our daughters, our sisters, our aunts, our cousins, our daughters, our friends, and all of the men in our lives who love us so much and who have sat by and watched too many of us suffer, struggle, fight, and even die.

Please, buy at least one pink fabric QSnap Hugger this month — just one. Get one in your most often used size QSnap, and if you don’t like it as a QSnap Hugger, perhaps you can find some alternate uses for it — it might work as a decorative casserole dish wrap, for example. But I’m certain you’ll like it as a QSnap Hugger, I think your QSnaps deserve a hug, and I KNOW YOU deserve a cure for breast cancer. Someday, we will find that cure, we will win, and it could be the QSnap Hugger YOU buy that puts us across the finish line. Imagine that.

“Giving your QSnap a hug never looked & felt so good.” (copyright 2007, Kim Ritchie, along with all pictures in this article)

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Great Minds!

Thursday, October 18th, 2007

You may recall that not all that long ago, I wrote about Meg Thompson Shinall’s (Blogroll) latest design called Life’s A Hoot …

Imagine my surprise to find Hedwig’s younger second cousin of a slightly different, but still closely related, species of owl, Ozzie, who is a scissor keeper and needle minder also starring the Putford scissors in a design called What a Hoot! from Janie Hubble of The Cat’s Whiskers (Blogroll).

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Orders are already being taken for Ozzie, a chart available for $5.

Hedwig is already here at my home with his darling baby owls and attracting lots of attention from my kitties, so I am holding off on Ozzie myself for just a bit … Not long because I am a diehard eighties Cardinals baseball fan who will always love the dearly retired #1 :) but long enough for … well, I’ll get to that.

Hedwig and Ozzie are definitely examples of a great bit of marketing by Kelmscott Designs’ Paula Sibbald … and if you don’t like the darker color of the Putford scissors, then perhaps you can switch out for a pair of the new Seaton scissors being released at the Online Needlework Show running right now! Think of them as the brunette and the blonde scissors … Janie Hubble even has a picture showing on her site with Ozzie in the new Seatons so you can decide which you like better before you buy the scissors.

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And that’s what I’m waiting for — because I don’t really need two pairs of the same scissors, and I really think this little Ozzie looks cuter as a blonde!  :D

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Sage Stitchworks Provides Needlework History and Wisdom

Saturday, October 13th, 2007

Sage Stitchworks (Blogroll) is a discovery I have been wanting to share with you for months. In fact, I’ve had this post all prepared … but the WordPress software didn’t seem to like it. It just would NOT let me use the Publish button. I have no idea why. Until today, when I was looking at it again, about to give up and try copying and pasting it to a new post, and I heard my DH griping out loud to himself about consumerism and the over-commercialization of everything because of some ad he ran across that mentioned, “There are only so many shopping days until … !” My heart skipped a beat because usually my shopping is all done by the end of October, and I haven’t even thought about it this year. My finger twitched, meaning I hit that lefthand mouse button while the cursor was poised over “Publish” again, and suddenly, there it is. Add a dash of panic, and the Publish button suddenly worked! Then I had to go back in to add this paragraph … So I guess this Publish button was also a Panic button! :D

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Sage Stitchworks creates needlework motto kits today using the same types of materials — perforated paper, variegated floss, and gold foil — which were used to make them in the Victorian era.

Enjoy exploring their website and you’ll find a wealth of information both on stitched mottoes from the past and on recreating them today, and I think you’ll also find your fingers itching to get started stitching one by the time you are done!

I was so excited about Sage Stitchworks that I called them the next day (it was the wee hours of the morning when I found their site the first time!) and spoke with Jennifer, who pretty much does everything as far as the business is concerned. I didn’t think to ask if she ever solicited any help from her family or anyone else as far as preparing kits or otherwise running the business, but it was wonderful to talk with someone who knew so much about how these kits were and are made, who was so willing to share information with me, and who seemed almost as excited to talk with me as I was to talk with her.

Below is a picture of what Jennifer would include in a typical kit for you: the pattern pre-printed on perforated paper, a Stitching Guide, plenty of variegated floss, gold foil backing, and a needle.

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Stitchers who are already very familiar with stitching and have their own stash of variegated floss they would like to use may easily do so. Sage Stitchworks offers every standard kit they make in a “Pattern Only” option for $20 less than the full kit would cost. With the Pattern Only Option, you receive only the pattern pre-printed on perforated paper. However, you’ll always have access to the directions, which Sage Stitchworks calls their Stitching Guide, online from the comfort of your own home.

The Pattern Only option may also be preferred by stitchers who enjoy changing a design’s colors, which is a much easier undertaking when stitching a motto than when stitching a cross stitch pattern. Sage Stitchworks’ mottoes do not come with detailed directions for each particular design; rather, you rely on the Stitching Guide, the picture of the finished design if you want it to look like it does with those colors, and your own wishes with regard to how you want it to look. As Jennifer remarked, she could very easily stitch the same motto twice in a row with the same colors and have tiny variations in her stitching — the stitching of mottoes isn’t as … persnickety … as much cross stitching, although the outcome is just as lovely.

The only item you may have some difficulty finding if you choose the Pattern Only option is the gold foil. However, Jennifer said this hasn’t seemed to be a problem for any of her customers. She recommended checking the gift-wrapping sections of various craft stores, especially around holiday time. I am positive I’ve seen gold foil gift wrap pretty much year round in certain stores which are known for carrying “high quality” (maybe it’s just expensive?) gift-wrap — such as Hallmark stores. That would be a bit on the pricey side, but it would give you your gold foil if that’s what you were looking for and still be well under the $20 you saved by choosing the Pattern Only option. Aluminum foil is another option — and it’s an inexpensive and readily available one, too — if you prefer the silver look over gold, which several of Sage Stitchworks’ customers do. Silver foil is also an authentically Victorian choice, so there is nothing historically inaccurate about it. And then Jennifer says since she doesn’t get asked about the foil very often that she thinks a lot of her customers just don’t bother with it, perhaps for the same reason she skips it herself: she often feels it steals attention from the stitching.

This Stitching Guide from Sage Stitchworks is one of the best guides I have ever seen, by the way, for explaining how to use long and short stitches in the technique specifically used to stitch mottoes on perforated paper — with a fantastic close-up picture that just brings it all together, especially if you are a visual learner as I am. This technique also works on evenweave or linen, and mottoes can be stitched on those materials, although I think the technique is most easily mastered on perforated paper first — and certainly it is much more difficult to keep those long stitches nice and straight on evenweave or linen … and then a good framing job becomes imperative to keep them in place. But for those who wish to do it, it can be done.

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Of course, once an experienced stitcher sees the above picture, something becomes really clear. Stitching a motto from Sage Stitchworks is an opportunity to have a happy dance in just a few days! It’s just a hop, a skip, and a jump from there to realizing these make FANTASTIC gifts, too, because they look like so much more work than they actually are … Of course, we stitchers have all mastered the art of saying, “Oh really, it didn’t take that long,” while everyone else who doesn’t stitch is thinking we are staying up until 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. every morning trying to get all our stitched gifts done for everyone. (Nevermind that in some cases we are; that’s because, in those cases, we’re having a darned good time! :D )

Sage Stitchworks also has taken the time to write up some of the history of mottoes I think you will enjoy reading.

You can also have special mottoes created for you. This option is shown specifically for a family last name, although the page mentions also having done first names in the past. Please keep in mind that the high price on this one is due to the individual typesetting required. I did ask Jennifer if it would be possible to order these in the Pattern Only option, and she said that is possible; however, the price would be reduced by $20 (just like with any of the other Pattern Only options) to $48.99, and again, this is to cover the typesetting required.

In fact, all you stitching grandparents out there might want to consider giving each of your grandchildren a kit with his or her name on it. These kits are actually advertised by Sage Stitchworks as being easy, satisfying, and addictive because they require absolutely no counting! What better way to get a child started loving needlework?

One of the things I talked with Jennifer about was the possibility of adding a new line of mottoes to the current product line she already has — something with a more modern feel. I don’t know for certain how well it would go over, but perhaps you all can make comments on this post to let Jennifer and me know what you think of the idea. It will be a bit of market research, although done rather haphazardly. Anyway, my thought was to have mottoes that say more modern things, but that are still designed with the textual look and feel of these recreated mottoes from yesteryear. I would just love to have something like, “Martha Who?” in a motto format, for instance. Or how about, “So it’s not Home Sweet Home; deal with it”? Jennifer and I had a few giggles coming up with other ideas of a similar nature, too, so if you have any suggestions along these lines, please feel free to add them as well. If you would prefer to contact Jennifer directly with your thoughts, she can be contacted through her website or emailed directly.

If you place an order or contact Jennifer with your thoughts, please be sure to mention that you heard about Sage Stitchworks through Independent Needlework News!

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Oh … just in case you also look through the Gallery on Sage Stitchworks’ website like I did, and just in case you notice some of the gorgeous mottoes stitched on black perforated paper like I did, and just in case you think you’d like to order any of those like I did, they have all unfortunately been retired. It seems that most stitchers found them difficult to stitch on such that Jennifer was receiving more complaints than praise about them … So she decided to discontinue those lines. I specifically asked about the pineapple Welcome design, and it is definitely out of print. :(

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I Bet You’ll Love Lucie!

Friday, October 12th, 2007

I received a nice note today from a new-to-me cross stitch designer, Lucie Heaton of LucieHeaton.com Cross Stitch Designs (Blogroll). That doesn’t happen very often because I’ve been around long enough and been researching this hobby so much of that time that I tend to know who most of the designers are already. So a new-to-me designer is a real treat. So is a new designer, but this one has been around a while based on the number of designs in her inventory — and it’s been twelve months according to her email.

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This cute frog is one of Lucie’s freebie designs, and she’s got lots of goodies for you to check out — all sorts of designs which would be great on cards and gift tags or for use as magnets or bookmarks.

Lucie has some very nice larger pieces, too — her Santa Sampler is so cute, and check out the fabulous idea someone who stitched it came up with for a fundraising competition!

I’m feeling a bit distracted myself at the moment because my mother-in-law had an angioplasty this morning, and now she’s in having bypass surgery. This is all way too soon after we lost Dad; I’m so nervous, I’m having trouble putting thoughts together.

So I’ve just purchased and downloaded Hair Dressing, which looks like it should be fairly simple so that hopefully I can concentrate on it well enough anyway.

My hairdresser is always asking me what I mean when I talk about cross stitching … I think I’ll just make her something, and then the next time I see her, I can show her! Does anyone have any suggestions for how I might want to finish this design, though, before giving it to a real hairdresser?

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