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Victorian Needlework

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Victorian Needlework

Second to none in their admiration of fine stitchery, the Victorians adorned their homes and wardrobes with lavish displays of needlework and similar handicrafts. Most nineteenth-century women engaged in some form of sewing ― whether for pleasure, economy, or both ― and in the absence of a tutor, they turned to handbooks such as this rare and authentic guide to the rich and varied intricacies of needlecraft.
Scores of diagrams and photos offer clear illustrations of the step-by-step directions for mastering an array of techniques and patterns. Ranging from a practical lesson in hemstitching to creating doilies with Hungarian embroidery, this vintage volume offers a treasury of what the Victorians termed "fancywork": decorative stitching such as Bulgarian, Catalan, Hungarian, and Baro embroidery; netting; Berlin wool-work; Bohemian, Carrickmacross, Innishmacsaint, and reticella lace: and a bevy of cousins to the burgeoning family of needlepoint.
Aspiring or accomplished, needleworkers at every level of expertise will find projects here to love ― knotting fringes for a handsome finished edge, trimming collars and cuffs with dainty punched work, making a lace collar in Brussels braid, and numerous other crafts, all abounding in old-fashioned charm.

Reprint of The Cult of the Needle, The Office of "The Girl's Own Paper & Woman's Magazine," London, n.d.
history of needlework; crafts and hobbies; arts and humanities; english history; fine stitchery; handicrafts; rich and varied intricacies of needlecraft; sewing; pleasure; economy; diagrams and photos; clear illustrations; step by step instructions; techniques and patterns; hemstitching; old fashion charm; british craft; fancywork; decorative stitching; needleworkers; needlepoint; knitting; tatting; fancywork; crochet; knotting; hygge
$11.95
Victorian Needlework—
$11.95

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Second to none in their admiration of fine stitchery, the Victorians adorned their homes and wardrobes with lavish displays of needlework and similar handicrafts. Most nineteenth-century women engaged in some form of sewing ― whether for pleasure, economy, or both ― and in the absence of a tutor, they turned to handbooks such as this rare and authentic guide to the rich and varied intricacies of needlecraft.
Scores of diagrams and photos offer clear illustrations of the step-by-step directions for mastering an array of techniques and patterns. Ranging from a practical lesson in hemstitching to creating doilies with Hungarian embroidery, this vintage volume offers a treasury of what the Victorians termed "fancywork": decorative stitching such as Bulgarian, Catalan, Hungarian, and Baro embroidery; netting; Berlin wool-work; Bohemian, Carrickmacross, Innishmacsaint, and reticella lace: and a bevy of cousins to the burgeoning family of needlepoint.
Aspiring or accomplished, needleworkers at every level of expertise will find projects here to love ― knotting fringes for a handsome finished edge, trimming collars and cuffs with dainty punched work, making a lace collar in Brussels braid, and numerous other crafts, all abounding in old-fashioned charm.

Reprint of The Cult of the Needle, The Office of "The Girl's Own Paper & Woman's Magazine," London, n.d.
history of needlework; crafts and hobbies; arts and humanities; english history; fine stitchery; handicrafts; rich and varied intricacies of needlecraft; sewing; pleasure; economy; diagrams and photos; clear illustrations; step by step instructions; techniques and patterns; hemstitching; old fashion charm; british craft; fancywork; decorative stitching; needleworkers; needlepoint; knitting; tatting; fancywork; crochet; knotting; hygge
Victorian Needlework | Dover Publications