Samplers and Tapestry Embroideries - LightNovelsOnl.com
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All these are good, and these we must allow, And these are everywhere in practise now."
_The Needles Excellency._--JOHN TAYLOR.
A Writer on the interesting subject of the st.i.tchery of embroidered pictures and their allies, is confronted at the outset with a serious difficulty in the almost hopeless confusion which exists as to the proper nomenclature of st.i.tches. It is hardly too much to say that nearly every st.i.tch has something like half a dozen different names, the result of re-invention or revival by succeeding generations, while to add to the trouble some authorities have a.s.signed ancient names to certain st.i.tches on what appears to be wholly insufficient evidence of ident.i.ty.
That st.i.tches known as _opus Anglicanum_, _opus plumarium_, _opus peclinum_, and so on, were used in embroidery as far back as the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, is proved by ancient deeds and inventories, but what these st.i.tches actually were we have no means of deciding with any degree of certainty.
We shall, therefore, in these notes describe the st.i.tches under the names by which they are most commonly known, or which seem to describe them most clearly.
Background-St.i.tches
When the backgrounds of pictures in raised or stump embroidery are not of silk or satin left more or less visible, they are usually worked in one or other of the innumerable varieties of cus.h.i.+on-st.i.tch, so-called, it is said, because it was first introduced in the embroidering of church kneeling-cus.h.i.+ons. Foremost among these ground-st.i.tches comes tent-st.i.tch, in which the flat embroidered pictures of a slightly earlier period are entirely executed. Tent-st.i.tch is the first half of the familiar cross-st.i.tch, but is taken over a single thread only, all the rows of st.i.tches sloping the same way as a rule, although occasionally certain desired effects of light and shade are produced by reversing the direction of the st.i.tches in portions of the work. An admirable example of evenly worked tent-st.i.tch is shown in Plate XV., although here, of course, it is not a purely background-st.i.tch, as it is adopted for the whole of the work.
[Ill.u.s.tration: PLATE XX.--BACK OF CASKET IN TAPESTRY EMBROIDERY. SIGNED A.
K., 1657. _Mrs Percy Macquoid._
We have here the true imitation of Tapestry as regards st.i.tch, but not so as regards composition, for it is seldom that in Tapestry we find such a lack of proportion as exists in this case between figures and accessories, tulips and carnations standing breast-high, and b.u.t.terflies larger than human heads. The harpy, which appears on the lower portion of the lid, is an exceptional form of decoration. The backs of caskets are always the least faded portions, as they have been less exposed to the sun and light; such is the case here, although the whole is in a fine state of preservation. It is one of the few dated pieces in existence, being signed "A. K.," 1657.]
Another commonly used grounding-st.i.tch is that known in modern times as tapestry or Gobelin-st.i.tch. This is not infrequently confused with tent-st.i.tch, which it much resembles, save that it is two threads in height, but one only in breadth.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 62.--CUs.h.i.+ON-St.i.tCH BACKGROUND; EMBROIDERED BOOK COVER, DATED 1703.]
Next in order of importance to these two st.i.tches come the perfectly upright ones, which, arranged in a score of different ways, have been christened by an equal number of names. An effective kind, used for the background of many Stuart pictures, consists of a series of the short perpendicular st.i.tches, arranged in a zig-zag or chevron pattern, each row fitting into that above it. This particular st.i.tch, or rather group of st.i.tches, has been named _opus pulvinarium_, but its claim to the t.i.tle does not seem very well supported. Other and more modern names are Florentine and Hungary st.i.tch. A neat and pretty cus.h.i.+on-st.i.tch is shown in the background of Fig. 62 on an enlarged scale. This is taken from a quaint little needle-book dated 1703; the design itself being worked in tent-st.i.tch.
Among other st.i.tches used for grounds are the long flat satin-st.i.tch familiar in j.a.panese embroideries of all periods, and laid-st.i.tches, _i.e._, those formed of long threads "laid" on the satin or silk foundation, and held down by short "couching" st.i.tches placed at intervals. Laid-st.i.tch grounds, however, are oftener seen in foreign embroideries, especially Italian and Spanish, than in English examples.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 63.--EYELET-HOLE-St.i.tCH: FROM A SAMPLER DATED 1811.]
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 64.--TAPESTRY EMBROIDERY (UPPER PORTION). ABOUT 1640.
_Formerly in the Author's possession._]
Although tapestry embroidery backgrounds are in most cases worked "solid,"
that is, entirely covered with close-set st.i.tches forming an even surface, they are occasionally found to be filled in with some variety of open-st.i.tch, as exemplified by Plate XV. Sometimes the lace-like effect is produced by covering the foundation material with a surface st.i.tch; the first row being a b.u.t.tonhole-st.i.tch, worked into the stuff so as to form the basis of the succeeding rows of simple lace or knotting st.i.tches. The last row is again worked into the foundation. When, however, a linen canvas of rather open mesh was the material of the picture or panel, it was not unusual to whip or b.u.t.tonhole over the threads with fine silk, a process resulting in a honeycomb-like series of small eyelet holes, as shown in the enlargement, Fig. 63. This is taken from an early nineteenth-century sampler, but the st.i.tch is precisely similar to that seen in embroideries of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Figures in Raised Needlework
The high relief portions of the embroidery known as "stump" or "stamp"
work, which is popularly supposed to have been invented by the nuns of Little Gidding, appear to have been almost invariably worked separately on stout linen stretched in a frame, and applied when completed. The design was sketched, or transferred, by means of something equivalent to our carbonised paper, on the linen, padded with hair or wool kept in position by a lattice-work of crossing threads, and the raised foundation, or "stump," thus formed covered with close lace-st.i.tches, or with satin or silk, which, in its turn, was partly or entirely covered with embroidery, generally in long-and-short st.i.tch. When the figures were finished a paper was pasted at the back to obviate any risk of frayed or loosened st.i.tches, and they were cut out and fastened into their proper places in the design which had been drawn on or transferred to the silk, satin, or canvas foundation of the actual picture. The lines of attachment are adroitly concealed by couchings of fine cord or gimp.
In some pieces of stump embroidery the heads and hands of the figures are of carved wood covered in most instances with a close network of lace-st.i.tch, or with satin or silk, on which the eyes and mouth are either painted or embroidered. In the more elaborate specimens, however, the satin is merely a foundation for embroidery in long-and-short or split st.i.tch, the latter being a variety of the ordinary stem-st.i.tch, in which the needle is brought out through, instead of at the side of, the preceding st.i.tch. The features of faces worked in either of these st.i.tches are generally indicated by carefully directed lines of stem or chain st.i.tching worked over the ground-st.i.tch. This latter when well worked forms a surface scarcely distinguishable from satin in its smoothness. The Figs. 65 and 66, which are enlargements of portions of the embroidery ill.u.s.trated in Fig. 64, show examples of this mode of working faces.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 65.--FACE WORKED IN SPLIT-St.i.tCH: ENLARGED FROM EMBROIDERY REPRODUCED IN FIG. 64.]
[Ill.u.s.tration: PLATE XXI.--BEADWORK EMBROIDERY. CHARLES II. AND HIS QUEEN, ETC.
The bright colouring of this picture is due to the greater portion of it having been worked in beads, in which those of strong blue and green predominate, only the hair and hands being worked in needlework, the former in knotted st.i.tches. Beadwork seems to have been extensively utilised in seventeenth-century pictures, but it does not figure in Samplers until a late date, and then only to a minor extent. It is ill.u.s.trated in Fig. 52, and is about a century old, having been included in the Fine Art Society's Exhibition.
The central figures in this piece represent Charles II. and his Queen, Catherine of Braganza, who is represented with that curious lock of hair on her forehead to which the King took so much objection when he saw it for the first time upon her arrival at Southampton. The portraits within the four circles have not at present been recognised. The late owner of this piece purchased it in Hammersmith, and from the fact that Queen Catherine had a house there it is possible that it may have once been a royal possession. Size, 13-1/2 17-1/2.]
Knot-St.i.tches
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 66.--FACE WORKED IN SPLIT-St.i.tCH: ENLARGED FROM LOWER PORTION (NOT REPRODUCED) OF FIG. 64.]
Knot-st.i.tches--these, by the way, have no connection with the knotting-work popular at the end of the seventeenth century--are introduced freely into the stump-work pictures to represent the hair of the human figures, together with the woolly coats of sheep and the sundry and divers uncla.s.sified animals invariably found in this type of embroidered picture. These knots or knotted st.i.tches range from the small, tightly-worked French knots which, when closely ma.s.sed, produce a sufficiently realistic imitation of a fleece, to the long bullion knots formed by twisting the silk thread ten or twelve times round the needle before drawing the latter through the loops. The sheep (enlarged from Fig.
64) in Fig. 67 shows very clearly the effect of the ma.s.sed French knots.
The longer knot-st.i.tches are found to be arranged in even loops sewn closely together, or are worked loosely and placed irregularly to meet the requirements of the design. Knot-st.i.tches of all kinds are seen, too, in the foliage, gra.s.s, and mossy banks, although for these couchings of loops of fine cord, untwisted silk and gimp, as well as of purl, seem to have been equally popular. At a later period, that is, towards the middle of the eighteenth century, chenille replaced knot-st.i.tches, couched loops, and purl for the purpose, but it proved much less satisfactory both as regards appearance and durability.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 67.--KNOTTED-St.i.tCH: ENLARGED FROM EMBROIDERY REPRODUCED IN FIG. 64.]
Looped-st.i.tches are also used to indicate flowing ringlets, for which the bullion knots would be too formal, as may be seen in Figs. 65 and 66. The loops in these examples are of partly untwisted gimp. In flat embroidery, it may be mentioned, the hair is frequently worked in long-and-short or split st.i.tch, or in short, flat satin-st.i.tches, the lines whereof are cleverly arranged to follow the twists of the curls. In this way the hair of the lady, shown on an enlarged scale in Fig. 66, is worked.
Plush-St.i.tch
This is a modern name for the st.i.tch used in the Stuart period embroideries for fur robes and the coats of certain beasts. It is also known as velvet, rug, and raised st.i.tch. To carry it out a series of loops is worked over a small mesh or a knitting pin, each loop being secured to the foundation stuff by a tent or cross-st.i.tch, and when the necessary number of rows is completed, the loops are cut as in the raised Berlin wool-work of early Victorian days. In this st.i.tch the ermine of the king's robe in Plate XVIII. is worked, the black st.i.tches meant to represent the little tails having been put in after the completion of the white silk ground.
Embroidery in Purl and Metallic Threads
Purl, both that of uncovered metal and that variety wherein the corkscrew-like tube is cased with silk, was generally cut into pieces of the desired length, which were threaded on the needle and sewn down either flat or in loops, according to the design. The greater part of the beautiful piece of embroidery ill.u.s.trated in Plate XXIII. is carried out in coloured purl, applied in pieces sufficiently long to follow the curves of the pattern. A small example of looped purl-work is shown in the left-hand upper corner of Fig. 66.
Purl embroidery, when at all on an elaborate scale, was worked in a frame and "applied," although the slighter portions of a design were often executed on the picture itself. The system of working all the heavier parts of such embroideries separately and adding them piece by piece, as it were, until the whole was complete, accounts, of course, for the extreme rarity of a "drawn" or puckered ground in old needlework pictures and panels.
Besides purl, gold and silver "pa.s.sing" often appears in certain sections of the work. "Pa.s.sing" is wire sufficiently thin and flexible to be pa.s.sed through instead of couched down on the foundation material, and with it such devices as rayed suns and moons are often embroidered in long-and-short st.i.tch. A thicker kind of metallic thread was employed for couching, this being made in the same manner as the j.a.panese thread so largely used in modern work, save that a thin ribbon of real gold took the place of the strip of gilt paper as a casing for the silk thread.
Water is sometimes represented by lengths of silver purl stretched tightly across a flat surface of satin or laid-st.i.tches, but not infrequently, instead of the purl, sheets of talc are laid over the silken st.i.tchery.
The water in Susannah's bath (Plate XIV.) is covered with talc, hence it appears light coloured in the reproduction.
When a metallic l.u.s.tre was needed, the plumules of peac.o.c.ks' feathers were occasionally employed, especially in the bodies of b.u.t.terflies and caterpillars, but these unfortunately have almost invariably suffered from the depredations of a small insect, and it is seldom that more remains of them in old embroideries than a few dilapidated and minute fragments, often barely recognisable for what they are.
Lace-St.i.tches
The needle-point lace-st.i.tches, so profusely used in the dresses and decorative accessories of the figures in Stuart embroideries, are, as a rule, of a close and rather heavy type. Sometimes they are found to be worked directly on the picture or panel as surface st.i.tches, in the manner already described as adopted for backgrounds; but it was undoubtedly more usual to work the ruffles, sleeves, flower-petals, b.u.t.terfly-wings, etc., separately, fastening them into their proper places when finished.
Stiffenings of fine wire were generally sewn round the extreme edge of any part intended to stand away from the background. A most interesting variety of lace-st.i.tches may be seen in the costume of the boy shown in the enlargement (Fig. 69), taken from the panel reproduced in Fig. 64. The small ill.u.s.tration (Fig. 61) heading this chapter ill.u.s.trates quite a different kind of lace-st.i.tch, to wit, the hollie-point, which, originally confined to church embroidery, was during the seventeenth century used to ornament under-garments and babies' christening-robes.
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 68.--EMBROIDERY PICTURE. A SQUIRE AND HIS LADY. SIGNED M. C. DATED 1657. _Mr Minet._
This embroidery, which bears the initials "M. C." and the date 1657 in pearls, is notable for the variety of st.i.tches which find a place upon it.
The central figures are dressed in elaborate costumes, the lady's robe of yellow satin being embroidered with coloured flowers and decked with pearls, laces, and flowers, an attire altogether inconsistent with the Puritanical times in which she lived.]
[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 69.--HAIR OF UNRAVELLED SILK: ENLARGEMENT OF PORTION OF EMBROIDERY REPRODUCED IN FIG. 64.]
Bead Embroidery