http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/web/corporate/pages.nsf/links/aa47f702d5996adc80257149002da95e
The shirt is part of the collection of the Warwickshire Museum:
http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/museum
http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/museum
You can see a very interesting article, including some designs from the shirt, here:
http://knol.google.com/k/elizabethan-blackwork-embroidery#
http://knol.google.com/k/elizabethan-blackwork-embroidery#
The sleeves on my chemise are very big and are designed to be puffy enough to allow them to be pulled out through slits in split sleeves. When worn without an oversleeve, they flow over my hands:
As with most of my clothes, the chemise is used for both Italian styles and under my Elizabethan loose gowns. The designs are worked in grey DMC cotton in a range of stitches, including buttonhole stitch, seeding stitch, stem stitch and double running stitch. All visible seams were handsewn, except for the hem.
The sleeve laid out before sewing (the white tiles underneath are showing through the thin fabric.) |
* also called as 'linear blackwork' or 'single-colour, non-counted blackwork'
I have no comments.... just want to say wow for
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