The Royal School of Needlework teaches hand embroidery to the highest standard developing techniques in new & innovative ways. This book
Includes:: an extensive stitch guide covering all the stitches necessary for crewel embroidery a design section & a history of the Royal School itself. Although it is commonly thought of as a woven tapestry the Bayeux Tapestry is in fact the oldest surviving example of crewelwork. The illustrations on the piece tell the story of the events leading up to the Norman Conquest & are embroidered on to the linen surface with a two-ply worsted wool. Laid stitches (see page 43) were used for the characters & scenery; couching (see page 60) for outlines & stem stitch (see page 58) to define detail & to render the lettering. Worsted wools are thought to have originated in the farming village of Worstead in Norfolk. This native resource most appropriate to the British climate was manufactured into clothing & became one of Britains most successful industries. To this day the inhabitants of Worstead continue the tradition of spinning dyeing & weaving fleece from local sheep. Although primarily spun to produce woollen cloth at some point it became popular to use this yarn to embroider. At first monochrome motifs stitched in wool with a small number of different stitches such as stem & seeding (see page 50) were the most common but embroidered curtains & bed hangings that resembled designs inspired by woodcut prints are known. Foreign trade created by Elizabeth I initially devised to bring back valuable spices found a foothold in Northern India where English merchants picked up coffee in Mocha & cloth in Gujarat. Egyptian trade was found to be profitable as they too welcomed cotton cloth in exchange for silver which reduced the drain on English silver while the Persians provided a market for the English woollens. Inevitably some of these Indian & African fabrics made it back to Europe where they were well-received. Pampalores & pintadoes painted calicos that came to be known in England as chintz were produced on the Coromandel coast of India & became very popular in the now-furnished households of Britain. By the late seventeenth century cheap washable cotton cloth & luxurious woven silks were in huge demand & contributed to the changing fashions in Britain. Fine beautiful fabrics encouraged less padding to be worn & instead more to be added to the furniture which during the Tudor period had been fairly stark. Furnishings obviously called for something a little more durable than clothing & designers began to create textile furnishings with easily accessible & more resilient materials such as dyed wools & heavy-duty linens; their designs inspired by the fashionable tree of life patterns found on the pampalores. After the Protestant Reformation there was little demand for ecclesiastic work so it was more common to see embroidery used for secular & domestic objects. Crewel embroidery thus became more popular & professional craftsmen laden with pattern books travelled the country redesigning the interiors of the wealthy; adorning country houses with cosy furnishings panels fire screens & bed-hangings embroidered with exotic illustrations. The lady of the house would then embroider these patterns with colourful crewel wools. Crewelwork reached its peak in popularity during the following Stuart period after Elizabeth I died & James VI of Scotland acceded to the throne of the United Kingdom as King James I. Increasingly amateur embroiderers took up needlework for pleasure & to furnish their own home & it became the done thing for a young lady to accomplish.