Wirework jewellery, netsuke, shetland lace, lace, textile arts, poetry and whatever else stirs in the art world




Monday 19 August 2013

Shetland lace christening robe

The basic dimensions are from a modern pattern, but, instead of a dress-type upper robe, I split the back, making it a faggoted-edged apron that buttons from the waist up. The buttons are crocheted on both the upper and under robes and there’s an extra row of holes under the upper robe buttons so that a cord can be threaded through both sides and used as a tie - for a baby who is too big for the buttoned robe. It also means that a different underobe can be substituted, if necessary.

I’ve also attached sleeves to the underobe using the same edging as the robe and scattered some crocheted flowers and a butterfly across its skirt. Dimensions: 36 inches long and to fit up to a 22 inch chest.The knitting up takes the time. I calculated it took about six months, knitting for two hours per day. A quick, full-time knitter might take about a month to two months.

I altered the motifs, insertion and edging on the robe, and, picking up some of the motifs in the border, made the body of the skirt a design of trees and flowers where possible. There’s also an extra slant-sided, flower motif on the bodice. The robe could have been very airy, but I wanted something of a closer knit, with a denser edging and insertion, so used a 2/48 or cobweb type wool and, as I’m a tight knitter, 2mm needles and didn’t block it to its limits. There are also a bonnet and bootees using the same edging.

It took a short while to conceive; about a week. A pencil and graph paper are all that's needed because the motifs are traditional. The only new one that's mine is the palm tree above the diamonds - and I expect a Shetland knitter came up with a similar one sometime in the past! The traditional motifs, stitches and stitch groupings, and there are lots of them, can be arranged in endless ways, though there were some developments of then new motifs in late Victorian times - crowns, swags of flowers, crosses, dalek-like creations and such nonsenses, mostly, to my eyes, pretty hideous.

This type of lace is really heirloom knitting; there are very few occasions on which something as delicate as this would be worn.

Shetland stole

Another interest of mine; lace-making - knitted lace, crocheted lace, needle-made lace. This stole is knitted in fine 2-ply wool, using No. 10 needles(UK), so it's not the finest Shetland knit. The diamond-shaped motifs at each end are known as shells and, traditionally, these borders differ in knit motifs from the centre. Dimensions are 2' x 5'.
It's from a traditional Shetland pattern from the 1940s, but with a different edging and more faggoting (the lines of criss-cross, very open stitch just above the edging) created by using herringbone stitch to fix the edge to the body of the stole.

The history of Shetland lace is interesting. Although Shetlanders had, for some centuries, knitted stockings and gloves for export, some lacy, some not, the finest lace knitting using delicate homespun yarn didn't really get going commercially until about 1830, when it started to be sold on the mainland. It turned into a cottage industry and knitters from all over the islands supplied Queen Victoria's court and other wealthy buyers with shawls, stoles, christening gowns, caps, gloves, socks, stockings and other items until the early part of the C20th. It then fell out of fashion and the art was in danger of being lost until the latter part of the century. Now, there is growing interest in this kind of lace which means that trade, too, is beginning to pick up.

Sunday 18 August 2013

A Book

It's made from old boxwood, with horn inlays of different colours and gold leaf underneath. It’s for a friend's 80th birthday; he's a writer, hence the book. The symbolism of the tree and the inscription on the back are personal to him; he'll know what they mean. The colours are deliberately autumnal, denoting, with affection, I hope, his age. Dimensions are 1 1/2" x 1 1/4" x 7/16".

I wanted an old-looking book, but not one with a damaged spine or corners, so worked on textures and distressing the surface. I discovered two things: gilding is a skill, so I settled eventually for a crinkled gold appearance underneath the horn inlays; carving the bezels in which to set the inlays also requires a delicate hand.

The inlays have 23k red gold leaf under the tree and roundel on the back (it has some Hebrew lettering underneath; the word “chai” means “life”).






Wood stains used were 1) a mixture of coffee and redbush and 2) a mixture of cochineal and turmeric, diluted; applied in different places and with different intensities.



The wood has reddish bands through it, visible on the spine, and I wanted to tie those in with the surface staining and the colour of the box. The 'page edges' and beading were left unstained. The piece was then lightly sanded to 12,000 grit and lightly oiled.



The box was handmade, too, and covered with a thick handmade, though printed, Japanese paper.