Archive for the ‘Helpful Hints, Tips, & Tricks’ Category

Awwwww … So CUTE!

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

I really enjoyed checking out the links on About.com: Miniature’s list of the Top Eight Sources for Dollhouse Needlework Kits. The majority of these kits are done on 40 count silk gauze, so I was a bit surprised not to see Threads Through Time listed. (I can’t find a website for Threads Through Time; if anyone knows of it, please let me know what it is! :) ) However, perhaps that’s because Threads Through Time doesn’t advertise to the dollhouse market (that I know of).

Anyway, I wanted to share Lesley Shepherd’s picks for miniature needlework with you because I think you’ll enjoy looking them over as much as I have.

I particularly enjoyed Janet Granger Designs and MicroStitchery (click on “Stitchery Paraphernalia”) because of the teeny tiny display stands they have available for customers to use to display their miniature needlework in their dollhouses. Too bad the prices for these items aren’t anywhere near teeny tiny, LOL!

I had no idea there were so many options out there for miniature needlework. These people creating items for the dollhouse market haven’t done much to market to the stitching market … Maybe that will change now because I think a lot of their designs are really fantastic!

Of course, there is nothing that says you HAVE TO stitch something on that small of a count. If you fall in love with one of these itty bitty patterns but aren’t comfortable stitching it on 40 count for whatever reason, stitch it on whatever fabric count you prefer.

By the way, I learned a hint from a friend several years ago which has made stitching on 40 count MUCH easier for me. Instead of stitching on 40 count silk gauze, which is very difficult to see, and which requires you to stitch the entire background, consider stitching on 40 count fabric with the fabric being the color you want the background to be. I find this so much easier to see (even when using a dark colored 40 count fabric!) than working on gauze — and since I don’t have to fill in the background, there is also a LOT less stitching to do.

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Make Your Own Matching Buttons

Monday, June 11th, 2007

I loved this post from graphic designer Jessica Jones in her blog How about orange on making fabric-covered thumb tacks … which started out as buttons.

Of course, I immediately thought this would be a wonderful item to share with all of you on how to make your own matching buttons to use on your needlework pieces (biscornus, needlebooks, scissor fobs, and anywhere else you want a matching button).

Or what about when you can’t find the right button to use on any piece of needlework, but you do have some fabric with the image you want? For instance, you need a daisy of a particular size, and you have a piece of fabric with a daisy just the right size … Now, you can just create your own button!

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Do You Have the New Exclusive Releases From Jennifer Aikman-Smith & Teresa Wentzler?

Thursday, June 7th, 2007

Are you aware that Jennifer Aikman-Smith of Dragon Dreams and Teresa Wentzler of TW Designworks teamed up with each other and released two sets of designs available only through PatternsOnline.com? Well, now you know! ;)

Moon Dragon and Sun Dragon are a stunning pair. The heavenly matched Celestial Sun and Celestial Moon would be perfect for a scissor fob or needlebook.

Teresa Wentzler also has released another design called Miniature Autumn Sampler exclusively through PatternsOnline.com, and she appears to be making all of her out of print designs, including those previously published only in magazines, available through PatternsOnline.com … So check this resource before spending a big chunk of change for an out of print TW pattern on eBay or another auction site!

And the best thing? Purchasing through PatternsOnline.com means instant gratification! So you can buy your chart and be stitching it within just a few minutes if you already have the threads on hand!

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About the Internet and Copyright Law

Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

In response to an earlier post on copyright law, a reader commented:

Just because you wrote some thing doesn’t mean it’s copyrighted. You have to file for a copyright through the Library of Congress and have a copyright number for there to be any copyright infringement.

I hope your legal team tells you that.

My commenter is wrong, of course. If she were a lawyer or had asked her own legal team, they would have told her so in order that she not come across as misinformed.

According to the US Copyright Office, copyright exists from the moment the work is created. Registration is recommended, but not required. Additionally, expect to see the recommendation for registration to change due to the Internet. The world is a different place now, and the laws must change right along with it. But the definition of what is theft will NOT change.

Copyright law has been the way it is now for some time.

Back when I finally finished writing my master’s thesis in 1998, I did not have to file for a Certificate of Registration in order for my thesis to be copyrighted. In fact, all the time I had been writing my thesis (I started writing in … 1992), even before it was finished, even before it was published, even before it was read by any of my professors, even before it was read by any other individual at all, it was copyrighted. That’s because copyright covers unpublished works as well as published ones.

If I keep a diary intended for no one’s eyes but mine, it is copyrighted, and I own the copyright.

I DID file for that Certificate of Registration on my master’s thesis
, though (you’ll have to look me up under my maiden name, Espie), just because I wanted the nice piece of paper from the Library of Congress. I’ll admit I was more easily convinced to part with the registration fee because, should I ever need to go to court if someone steals my original work and claims it as their own, I wanted that piece of paper as proof. That will make the court case EASIER, but it wasn’t REQUIRED. The copyright always existed, it always belonged to ME, and anyone who might try to pass off my work as their own is STEALING.

By the way, it sure is a good thing copyright exists from the time the work is created. Here is a story about red tape. I mailed my application and the required fees in April of 1998. I finally received my Certificate of Registration from the Library of Congress in March of 2000 — and the Effective Date of Registration is stamped January 14, 1999. So the Library of Congress wasn’t all that behind in processing the Certificate of Registration, but they were well over a year behind in mailing their outgoing mail.

Can you imagine the implications to the needlework industry if copyright weren’t actually in effect the whole time? My, my, that could present quite a conundrum, couldn’t it? Imagine all the unhappy needlework designers unable to release their new designs until they finally received their Certificates of Registration … Think of all the shops who would have no new designs coming in to offer their customers … All of us stitchers would have nothing new to tickle our fancies. Good grief, we might all have to stop with the retail therapy! We might actually be stuck with just stitching!! Or, gulp, even stuck doing something else, like reading, or sleeping, or WORKING!!! It gives me nightmares just thinking about it. Thank goodness for copyright. Whew!

So, yes, everything I write is copyrighted from the second I write it. Period. It’s the law. Buckle up, be grateful, and keep your hands inside the car at all times. Thank you, and enjoy the ride!

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Jan Houtman Designs

Friday, April 27th, 2007

I know a lot of stitchers really love Jan Houtman designs, but that those same designs are also very difficult to find, especially in the US. Well, if you’ve been looking for something in particular by Jan Houtman, hurry on over to the online Needlework Show and check out the Show link for Naald en Draad. Then, find a shop on the online Needlework show’s list of participating retail shops and place your order.

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