mj.needleandthread
| Total Posts | Last Post | Last Seen | Joined |
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| 2371 | 08/28/08 12:24:03 | 08/28/08 12:24:03 | 07/18/06 |
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Sampler and Antique Needlework Quarterly
Fine Lines*
Just CrossStitch
Classic Stitches
New Stitches
Inspirations
CrossStitch Sampler*
Treasures In Needlework*
Piecework
The Gift Of Stitching
Wiehler Gobelin
(* indicates out of publication)
Antique Needlework Links
http://www.glasgowmuseums.com/venue/index.cfm?venueid=1
http://www.pilgrimhall.org/samplers.htm
http://medieval.webcon.net.au/index.html
http://www.elizabethancostume.net/
http://www.exemplum.co.uk/home.html
http://www.powys.gov.uk/index.php?id=2156&L=0
http://www.samplings.com/
http://www.plimoth.org/
http://www.tlysau.org.uk/en/subjects/2544
http://www.osv.org/
And what is a stitch for? To hold.
It binds past to present, old country to new,
generation to generation.
My November Guest
My Sorrow, when she's here with me,
Thinks these dark days of autumn rain
Are beautiful as days can be;
She loves the bare, the withered tree;
She walks the sodden pasture lane.
Her pleasure will not let me stay.
She talks and I am fain to list:
She's glad the birds are gone away,
She's glad her simple worsted grey
Is silver now with clinging mist.
The desolate, deserted trees,
The faded earth, the heavy sky,
The beauties she so truly sees,
She thinks I have no eye for these,
And vexes me for reason why.
Not yesterday I learned to know
The love of bare November days
Before the coming of the snow,
But it were vain to tell her so,
And they are better for her praise.
~ Robert Frost
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Old Sampler
Out of the way, in a corner
of our dear old attic room,
Where bunches of herbs from the hillside
Shake ever a faint perfume,
An oaken chest is standing,
With hasp and padlock and key,
Strong as the hands that made it
On the other side of the sea.
When the winter days are dreary,
And we're out of heart with life,
Of its crowding cares aweary,
And sick of its restless strife,
We take a lesson in patience
>From the attic corner dim,
Where the chest still holds it treasures,
A warder faithful and grim.
Robes of an antique fashion,
Linen and lace and silk,
That time has tinted with saffron,
Though once they were white as milk;
Wonderful baby garments,
'Broidered with loving care
By fingers that felt the pleasure,
As they wrought the ruffles fair.
A sword, with the red rust on it,
That flashed in the battle tide,
When from Lexington to Yorktown
Sorely men's souls were tried;
A plumed chapeau and a buckle,
and many a relic fine,
And all by itself the sampler,
Framed in with berry and vine.
Faded the square of canvas,
And dim the silken thread,
But I think of white hands dimpled,
And a childish, sunny head;
For here in cross and tent-stitch,
In a wreath of berry and vine,
She worked it a hundred years ago,
"ELIZABETH, AGED NINE."
In and out in the sunshine
The little needle flashed,
And in and out on the rainy day,
When the merry drops down plashed,
As close she sat by her mother,
The little Puritan maid,
And did her piece on the sampler,
While the other children played.
You are safe in the beautiful heaven,
"ELIZABETH, AGED NINE;"
But before you went you had troubles
Sharper than any of mine.
Oh, the gold hair turned with sorrow
White as the drifted snow,
And your tears dropped here, where I'm standing,
On this very plumed chapeau.
When you put it away, its wearer
Would need it never more,
By a sword-thrust learning the secrets
God keeps on yonder shore;
And you wore your grief like glory,
You could not yield supine,
Who wrought in your patient childhood,
"ELIZABETH, AGED NINE."
Out of the way, in a corner,
With hasp and padlock and key,
Stands the oaken chest of my fathers
That came from over the sea;
And the hillside herbs above it
Shake odors fragrant and fine,
And here on the lid is a garland
To "ELIZABETH, AGED NINE."
For love is of the immortal,
And patience is sublime,
And trouble a thing of every day
And touching every time;
And childhood sweet and sunny,
And womanly truth and grace,
Ever can light life's darkness
And bless earth's lowliest place.
Mrs. M.E.Sangster
Poems of Home Life
American Tract Society, N.Y.C., New York
I am a 47 year old, avid sampler stitcher from Nova Scotia Canada, currently living in Colorado. I spend most of my time, stitching, reading, stitching, on the
net, stitching, doing housework, and, of course, stitching!
Neart, gradh, agus onoir...
My Blog....
http://samplerstitcher.blogspot.com/
My email...
mjstitches@gmail.com
I cannot count my day complete
'Til needle, thread and fabric meet.
~Author Unknown~
....
Hobbies: stitching,gem collecting...
Obsessions: LOTR, Babylon 5, poetry, and sampler research.
/\
l
l
l
l
Me

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08/12/08 12:24:26 | 0 Comments
Yesterday my friend Michael died. He has been having heath issues for awhile now and they caught up with him. He leaves behind a beautiful wife and daughters. There is a hole in my heart a mile wide. No one can ever replace him.
R.I.P Katana Tiger. We will meet again.
07/14/08 17:59:53 | 0 Comments
07/13/08 10:01:01 | 0 Comments
Later.
06/12/08 21:58:30 | 0 Comments
05/28/08 20:55:40 | 0 Comments
05/21/08 21:47:54 | 0 Comments
05/15/08 00:55:52 | 0 Comments
05/06/08 22:41:08 | 0 Comments
| Title | Type | Date |
|---|---|---|
| Re: My August ornie... | Reply | 08/28/08 |
| Re: I'm Back... | Reply | 08/28/08 |
| Re: Seahorse tin...Aug. 26 | Reply | 08/26/08 |
| I got three awards! | New Topic | 08/26/08 |
| Re: Trying new things...Aug. 24 | Reply | 08/26/08 |
| Re: Website for lavender and lace | Reply | 08/23/08 |
| Re: Finished Sweet Treats | Reply | 08/22/08 |
| Re: Celtic Banner update | Reply | 08/22/08 |
| Re: Roly Purrly...Aug. 20 | Reply | 08/21/08 |
| Re: Crewel HD | Reply | 08/20/08 |
Indian Garden...FINISHED...WOOT!!
Jane Turner repro samplar
My version of Little Paradise sampler finished!!!!!!
Celtic Banner...current WIP
I have been reading the blog "The Embroiderers Story" for a few months now with great interest and enjoyment. Plymoth Plantation, along with the help
of volunteers, are recreating a 17th century embroidered jacket similar to this one worn by Dorothy Carey in this portrait (c. 1614-1618). It is a massive
undertaking, requiring complex planning and the skills of many people....if historic costume or embroidery interest you, you should check it out...it has
become my morning 'must read' with my coffee.
http://www.plimoth.org/embroidery-blog/index.php?mode=viewmonth&month_no=5&year=2007&pageno=10&limit=5
I`ve given you the link to the first page..there are a lot of pages already in the blog, but don`t let that put you off..it is fascinating reading.
Here are a few shots of the WIP from the blog...
go for it!..I can take it.
Rose62
08/27/08
Original comment »
Rose62
08/27/08
Have you ever done their stitching retreat? This will be my 4th or 5th year and I can't wait. We should definitely get together, we could meet at FanciMats and have lunch after.
Original comment »
Rose62
08/25/08
Small world isn't it, I'm in Westminster. We should get together some day and have lunch and hit some LSN.
Rose
Original comment »
RedStorm26ca
08/03/08
Original comment »
mommedout
07/17/08
go for it!..I can take it.