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Stumpwork Butterflies & Moths (Milner Craft…
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Stumpwork Butterflies & Moths (Milner Craft Series) (2014. Auflage)

von Jane Nicholas (Autor)

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Following the popular Stumpwork Dragonflies and Stumpwork Beetles, Stumpwork Butterflies & Moths is the third in a series of stitched insect collections. Jane Nicholas has created a “specimen box” of jewels with 18 Lepidoptera, all chosen for interest, color, and to showcase an assortment of materials and techniques. There's everything from surface embroidery in lustrous silks for the Indian Moon Moth to stitched clear plastic for the Glasswing Butterfly.… (mehr)
Mitglied:SamanthaC
Titel:Stumpwork Butterflies & Moths (Milner Craft Series)
Autoren:Jane Nicholas (Autor)
Info:Sally Milner Publishing (2014), 288 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
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Stumpwork Butterflies & Moths von Jane Nicholas

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  CathyLockhart | Sep 30, 2022 |
I am incredibly impressed by the level of research in Jane Nicholas's insect embroidery books. I don't read them expecting to learn more about the critters she embroiders, but I do: The natural history and basic biology of the insects are included; she also includes the history of the use of those insects in art, design & embroidery; and all of the projects are based on specific species of insects, quite true to life, with background information on their classification, habitat, and life cycles. It blows me away.

I've now completed one of the butterflies--the Chalkhill Blue Butterfly.



Below is a photo of an actual Chalkhill Blue Butterfly, to give you an idea of how realistic the embroidery is:



Wow, right?

The instructions were detailed, thorough and accurate. This time, I used a much finer gauge of wire, and it was much easier to couch to the fabric and buttonhole stitch over it.



The instructions for shaded satin stitch in the wings also made sense, and made a final product that looked mostly like the photo in the book (any discrepancies I'm chalking up to my poorer relative skill level).



The wings cut out well and inserted through the background fabric no problem, and the remaining instructions to embroidery the body and antennae were simple and accurate. Voila, the final product (beside the ladybug I embroidered from her beetles book a few weeks ago):



Some imperfections to note:

-I didn't have the stripey thread she used for the antennae, so mine are solid.
-I also didn't have and couldn't find 3mm beads for the head, so my head is not quite the right proportion for the body--still, I think it works
-I also didn't want to pay shipping on the brand of chenille thread she used for the body, so I used a fuzzy thread I could buy locally. It's not quite right but it's better than the shipping charge would have been.
-And lastly, you can see the pencil tick marks on the background fabric showing where the butterfly ought to have extended to, according to the "finished size" photo/diagram. Mine is clearly smaller. I followed the patterns for the wings quite carefully, so either the photo/diagram of the finished project is a smidge off, or you're supposed to buttonhole stitch around the wing shape, and not directly over it. In any case, it's a minor thing, and won't affect my ability to use the butterfly pattern on anything else I choose.

Five stars. I'm having a fantastic time with stumpwork so far. Yes, it's small and fiddly, but the smallness means that each element works up really quickly, and I can see lots of potential for including little bits like these on clothing and bags and other projects. ( )
  andrea_mcd | Mar 10, 2020 |
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Following the popular Stumpwork Dragonflies and Stumpwork Beetles, Stumpwork Butterflies & Moths is the third in a series of stitched insect collections. Jane Nicholas has created a “specimen box” of jewels with 18 Lepidoptera, all chosen for interest, color, and to showcase an assortment of materials and techniques. There's everything from surface embroidery in lustrous silks for the Indian Moon Moth to stitched clear plastic for the Glasswing Butterfly.

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