1. Please introduce yourself – name, where you are from, family, pets etc.
My
name is Margaret. For the past 26 years I have lived in Auckland,
New Zealand. By day I work for a government department and by night
I care for my elderly mother. For the past three years I have been
practising living on the same amount of money as the government
pension, just to prove to myself I can do it. Why? Well in 27
months I will be receiving my Gold Card and become an OAP.
2. How
long have you been stitching and how did you start?
At four years old I spent six months in bed ill and to keep me occupied my grandmother sent me a Semco “fancy work” kit. My mother had fond memories of stitching these in her younger days and helped me learn stem stitch, satin stitch, lazy daisy stitch etc. I made a bad job of completing the cheval set around which my arthritic grandmother lovingly crocheted an edging. Then around twenty years ago I went to a two day class on Brazilian Embroidery and sat next to a woman who inspired me to join the Embroiderers Guild. Since then I have been an avid stitcher.
Margaret's first stitched piece
Brazilian Embroidery
3. How
long have you been blogging and what inspired you to start? Is
there a story behind your blog title?
One
day I stumbled across a blog called The Peacock’s Feather and from
there I visited other sites. The IT man at work taught me the
basics of setting up a blog and away I went. My posting is far less
regular than it was (life administration gets in the way) but I still
‘visit’ my blogging friends and with some even talk by email.
Back in the day there were many exchanges and I sent and received
parcels to many different countries. Sadly postage costs have
killed that pleasure.
4. How would you describe your stitching style? Are you a serial starter, a rotator, a OAAT (one at a time), highly organised, random and eclectic, etc.?
4. How would you describe your stitching style? Are you a serial starter, a rotator, a OAAT (one at a time), highly organised, random and eclectic, etc.?
My
favourite is Hardanger (in which I am self taught from the Janice
Love books) but I have dabbled in almost every other technique except
ribbon embroidery. While I have kept to my vow not to have UFO’s
I do currently have three WIP’s, which is really two too many for
me��
5. Do
you have a favourite designer or style of design you are drawn to?
I love Christmas Designs. Every year I stitch Christmas Ornaments for my three nieces and two nephews and I have 12 years of Just Cross Stitch Christmas Ornament magazines from which to choose.
I prefer books, boxes, etuis, hussifs, etc rather than framed pieces for the wall although I do have quite a collection of cross stitch M in frames on my bedroom wall. With the cost of framing I have called a halt to that collection now. But as readers of my blog will know, I always revert to my favourite hardanger for rest and relaxation.
I have stitched nearly fifty of these hardanger tassels – both with roses and without – and am always grateful for the skilled embroiderer who taught this class all those years ago.
I prefer books, boxes, etuis, hussifs, etc rather than framed pieces for the wall although I do have quite a collection of cross stitch M in frames on my bedroom wall. With the cost of framing I have called a halt to that collection now. But as readers of my blog will know, I always revert to my favourite hardanger for rest and relaxation.
I have stitched nearly fifty of these hardanger tassels – both with roses and without – and am always grateful for the skilled embroiderer who taught this class all those years ago.
Hardanger Tassels
6. Which piece are you most proud of in your collection?
What a difficult question to answer! Perhaps it would be my ‘tool box’ which was sparked by a piece in the Sampler & Antique Needlework Magazine but which I changed completely.
Or perhaps I should say Lauren Sauer’s “The Mermaids Purse” is the one I am very proud of. I sent to Canada for the threads and fabric and then stitched it very carefully and am now way too scared to actually use it.
7. What
has been your worst stitching disaster?
My
one attempt at Silk Shading technique was one. I paid for a two day
class at the Guild and I made a valiant attempt to like the technique
and the project but it was a disaster and I never finished. That
piece went to The Great Embroidery Exhibition in the Sky!!
And the other? A complicated hardanger mat for the top of the chest in my bedroom. Stitched over many months, I foolishly rushed the cutting out and snipped several of the buttonholes on the edge. Oops…this one will not be able to be washed? Every time I look at it I am reminded, “slowly and carefully”!
And the other? A complicated hardanger mat for the top of the chest in my bedroom. Stitched over many months, I foolishly rushed the cutting out and snipped several of the buttonholes on the edge. Oops…this one will not be able to be washed? Every time I look at it I am reminded, “slowly and carefully”!
8. Which
new technique would you like to try, either stitching, finishing or
another craft?
I
love counted work so want to try Reticella, Ruskin lace, Schwalm,
some more Wessex, Fisherton and Ukranian, some Punto Antico, Hedebo,
Portugese Whitework, Sardinian Knotted Embroidery, and possibly
Deruta.
9. Do
you have a box of finished-but-not-fully-finished pieces? Or is
everything FFO'd? What's your favourite way to fully finish a
project and what do you do with them?
I
currently have two pieces stitched but not constructed. This is
rare for me as I like to “finish finish” projects as I go. And
in the bottom of my sweater drawer, lying between two pieces of acid
free tissue, is a whitework sampler that is complete but will never
be framed. I wanted to stitch this but don’t want it on my wall!
I have a cabinet full of completed pieces but most of my stitching is
given away as gifts to family and long suffering friends.
10. Which
of your projects most represents "you"?
Probably my two travel books. Since I was 13 years old I have had a dream of visiting the UK. I kept a list, culled from books, of what I wanted to see, do, eat. As the years went by I started a savings account - this was to be a ‘don’t worry about the money’ trip of a life time. And then….I found two wonderful stitching charts. Voila!
Travel books
11. Tell
us a secret about yourself. Or a joke. About anything!
If
I wrote it down it wouldn’t be a secret would it?