Lilac: Elaine’s Botanicals
These heady scented flowers are almost past their best at this time of year. Their rich aroma fills the night air and the colours are those of romance and passion with soft pinks through to purples with a few lovely blues thrown in. Stitching this little design means you can enjoy it all year round instead of just in early spring, or mid spring in the highlands.
With mostly stem stitch, double running stitch and a few french knots, Lilac is one of the easier embroidery designs amongst the range from Elaine’s Botanicals.
Expanded Roseworks Range
Check out the new additions to our Roseworks Embroidery Designs selection. Woodland Friends and Kismet have been part of Colleen’s range for some time but they have just joined ours.
Woodland Friends is a delightful companion piece to Forest Floor and her 2010 offering Terry Toad and Reggie Rat go Fishing.
Kismet is a lovely companion piece to Golden Persian Flower. Roseworks Embroidery Designs have been a welcome addition to our Embroidery room and customers love them as much as we do. All of these designs and many more are available online and in store now.
Iris: Elaine’s Botanicals
This lovely flower has grown so prolifically in the raised garden beds at our house. Craig is planning to divide (split, … whatever word you use …) them and put some in Victoria House gardens in Autumn. It even looks like he has the same one Elaine’s Botanicals depicts here. The stitches used are french knots, pistol stitch, double running stitch and stem stitch. Iris is a very pretty embroidery design and good starting point for a novice stitcher.
Hydrangea: Elaine’s Botanicals
Hydrangea is another of the more challenging of Elaine’s Botanicals. There is a chain stitch that is distinctive in its minute size and requires a steady, even hand and eye for a uniform finish. Other embroidery stitches include french knots, of course, and double running stitch and stem stitch.
Of all the colours that could have chosen to represent the Hydrangea, blue has the most significance to me. My appearance as a bridesmaid at the wedding of my oldest friend saw me carrying these in a bouquet and wearing a dress about this exact colour.
Great thing about being the only bridesmaid is you get to have a bit of input into the style and exact shades of your outfit. Lucky for me I liked both the colour and style, long fitted sleeveless sheath dress and a Chanel style jacket with self colour trim, and at the risk of sounding like a complete dork I did actually wear both pieces again! Generally as separates. So if anyone suspected it was a former bridesmaid outfit, they were far too polite to say.
Horse chestnut: Elaine’s Botanicals
Another of the more subtle designs from Elaine’s Botanicals, but also one of the designs more suited to the more experienced embroidery stitcher. Stem stitch, french knots, double running stitch and pistol stitch are all featured in the Horse chestnut design. There is a layering to the application of the stitches that looks deceptively easy.
Up until the purchase of Victoria House Needlecraft, my most enduring memory of the Horse chestnut tree was a saucy reference to its aroma in a passage of text from that notorious literary bad boy, The Marquis de Sade.
There is also, as I look at the green spikey casings, a very vague (maybe I was about 6 years old) recollection of making a swan (I think it was a swan) from the casing. The spikey bi-valve casing formed the wings of the swan. Does anyone else remember anything like that?
The garden at Victoria House has a very old tree that fruits prolifically every year. Luckily it is a beautiful looking tree with lovely flowers. Last year after watching Jamie Oliver cook chestnuts in a billy can over an open fire, Craig and I tried out his recipe. It had orange peel, a bay leaf and a few other herbs and spices. They were horrible! They were also horrible when we tried roasting them in the oven. Not sure what we are doing wrong, got any suggestions?
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Victoria House Needlecraft
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