Showing posts with label ribbon flower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ribbon flower. Show all posts

Thursday, August 11, 2022

Appliqué Academy: Pineapple Medallion


The pineapple has been a symbol of welcome for many generations, and our Pineapple Medallion will do just that as it hangs in your home. This dimensional block was inspired by a fabric we purchased last year. When we saw the design, we knew that we needed to translate it into a medallion and hopefully a future quilt. We also knew that it would be perfect block to teach at the Academy of Appliqué in Williamsburg, Virginia. This will be our second session class, March 2-4, 2023.


This block is chock full of dimensional flowers and leaves that look difficult, but are certainly not! In class, we will teach you how to make wired ribbon roses, ruched silk flowers, velvet and bias silk leaves, and let's not forget a fantastic, dimensional silk pineapple adorned with beads and stitching. 

Two layers of wired ombre ribbon will be used to create the roses.

A special technique using seam binding creates a two-color bloom. Little
embroidered details with big impact will be taught as well.

Come learn how we created this padded and embellished silk pineapple. 
Once you learn how, you will be able to use the technique with other
appliqué projects.

These silk ruched flowers are adorned with a rich, beaded, velvet center.

Lest we forget that this is the Academy of Appliqué, we will be 
teaching a couple of different appliqué techniques in class.

The class catalog for the Academy is a rather large file full of amazing classes and teachers, so it does take a little bit of time to load, but it is worth the wait. Our classes will be at the very end (p. 58), and we hope you will consider taking one or both of them. We strive to make our classes a fun and encouraging environment, where we learn a lot but laugh while doing it.

If you have any questions about any of our sessions or the Academy, we would be happy to answer them. The Academy of Appliqué is an awesome place to spend a few days or a week learning new things, but also making new friends who share the joy in the wonderful creative process that is appliqué. The link below will take you to the Academy website, where you can learn more about the Academy. Registration will take place online at noon EDT on Labor Day, September 5th. 

We hope to see you there!

ACADEMY OF APPLIQUÉ

Monday, August 8, 2022

Appliqué Academy: Woodland Reverie—Owls and Wood Roses

It is that time of year again! The catalog of classes has now been published, and we can finally reveal what we will be teaching at the Academy of Appliqué in Williamsburg, Virginia in 2023. Check out that catalog of wonderful offerings, and you will have a difficult time deciding what classes to enjoy: there are so many amazing instructors with a wide variety of techniques and skills presented. We do hope you will keep scrolling all the way to the end (p. 58) to see our classes, but we will show you a bit of detail here, too. 

In our first session (February 27–March 1), we are continuing our woodland journey with two new blocks from our growing Woodland Reverie quilt. Both of these dimensional blocks are filled with many different fibers and stitching techniques. 

The Great Horned Owls sit amongst winter greenery, with wool pinecones and stuffed holly berries.

Wired ribbon roses surround our Wood Rose Garden filled with lovely little posies.

All skills for both blocks will be covered in this class—and some will overlap—so you will be able to increase your appliqué and embellishment skills. Multiple methods of appliqué will be taught, along with ribbon work and embroidery. We will play with exciting new fibers and techniques to help you bring life to these dimensional woodland blocks. 

We are creating our Woodland Reverie blocks on both a dark and light background. Which will you choose?

Which woodland block will you select for this session? Or perhaps you will venture into our woodland reverie and choose both! We have presented four of the blocks thus far, and those patterns are available in our web store. If you want to learn more about our Woodland Reverie quilt, CLICK HERE.

Details of Great Horned Owls

This sleepy owl is embellished with wool threads and turkey work.

Wool roving and Ultrasuede add the final touches on the owls’ faces.

Dimensional wool pinecones with stuffed holly berries and simmering ribbon mistletoe and fun texture to this block.

Details of Wood Rose Garden

Dimensional cast-on stitched posies are centered with a bias silk ribbon flower.

Hand-dyed bias silk ribbon bloom

Posies made with cast-on stitch and silk ribbon leaves

Wired ribbon adds eye appeal to these layered wood roses, centered with padded silk. Broderie perse leaves add realism and fun to our featured corner blooms.


Every year at the Academy when people see our work, they comment that they wished they could have seen them in person, as a photograph never quite captures the dimension and texture of the blocks. We have striven to capture images that illustrate those qualities and hope that these larger pictures help you to see that. It is always a challenge!

As always, if you have any questions, please reach out and email us. We are happy to answer any queries for you as you choose your classes. There are so many awesome classes being offered this year that we do not envy your selection process. But we sure would love to see you in our room! 


If you love appliqué, this is the place for you. It is perfection: a gathering of sisters (and perhaps some brothers) who share your passion for stitching, who will become fast friends. Its location on the James River in Williamsburg adds to the charm of this event. Many thanks to Barbara Blanton and her staff, who work so hard to create this opportunity for us. The link below will take you to the site, where you can learn all about the Academy, as well as access the catalog. We hope to see you there!


Thursday, July 29, 2021

And the Winner is...

We were thrilled to see so many wonderful flowers listed in our giveaway! It is great to know that so many stitchers out there love flowers as much as we do. Lilies and tulips led the way as the most popular flowers, but there were quite a few that piqued our interest since we hadn't stitched them before. Flowers have been our mainstay to stitch since we began our little business, and we thought it would be fun to show some of the ones that we have stitched—along with a few that are now on our stitching radar. And of course, we will reveal who the lucky winner of our Botanical Beauties quilt kit!

Bias silk ribbon tulips
A wired ribbon lily


And an appliquéd lily

Wired ribbon violets
Wool Hydrangeas

Sunflowers three different ways

Wired ribbon

Silk ribbon
Wool

A rose is a rose...



Seam binding rose and leaf

Poppies!

From our Hopeful Bluebird Stitching Smalls
A wool lapel pin














Cotton Appliqué

Pansies

Seam binding
Bias silk ribbon



















Sweet Peas

Wool
Wired ribbon



















A few of the flowers mentioned that we have in the works



And while we haven't stitched these yet, here are a few of your suggestions—we even had pictures of them already!

Hollyhock
Nasturtium
Bee Balm


Coneflower

So that is a different kind of walk in the garden than we did before and we hope that you enjoyed seeing our passion for flowers in stitching form. 

Now onto our lucky winner...

Lorianne Alvesteffer

Congratulations Lorianne! Please send us a message with your address and we will put your Botanical Beauties kit in the mail to you. 

Thank you to everyone who participated in our giveaway, and if you would like to purchase your own Botanical Beauties kit, you can find it and many other flower-themed projects available there.


Thursday, June 10, 2021

"In the Garden" Again: Hummingbird and Fuchsia

Spring is waning and summer is near. Porches are bedecked with hanging flower pots brimming with blooms, and among my (Teri's) favorites is the fuchsia. Its colors are so vibrant and the design is magnificently detailed—a perfect companion to our little feathered friend, the hummingbird. You won't believe how fun it is to create these ribbon fuchsias, and they aren't as hard as they look like they'd be—promise! It feels a bit magical when you are gathering these petals. 



As before, the printed pattern includes all the ribbon you need to create this block, as well as the pistils and metallic braid for the hummingbird, and this week, you can save 10% with the coupon code HUMMINGBIRD10. Are you ready for some flower fun?!

🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃🍃


Thursday, May 10, 2018

"In the Garden"—Hummingbird and Fuchsia



We are back In the Garden this week with the latest block of the month in our series. What better time than spring—at least here in the northern hemisphere—to think about what to plant to attract those cheerful, bright hummingbirds? Fuchsia seemed the obvious choice, with their vibrant colors . . . and they are fun to create, as well! We had a fabulous time blooming fuchsia in our class this past Sunday. You, too, can join in the fun; the pattern, complete with ribbon, pistils, and a metallic twist, is available on our website!





Here is how this block came together.

I (Teri) first stitched the branch and leaves in place. I used a matching green wool for the leaves, as my wool had a herringbone design and didn't really need veins. You could, however, embroider some veins if your wool is a solid.

The hummingbird's ruby throat is stitched down using Painter's Threads Metallic Twist, by Threadnuts, with a chain stitch. Ribbon stitches in 7mm silk ribbon are stitched below for his white breast. Green feather-stitched feathers are stitched on his body. The wings and beak are embroidered with a dark floss. His French-knotted eye is topped with a white bullion.

The Fuschia

I used two pistils, folded them in half, and tacked the pistils to the center of my purple satin ribbon.

   
Then, I folded the purple ribbon around the pistils at 45-degree angles, above left, and did a running/gathering stitch across the ribbon, above right.


   
To secure the gathers and shape the center of the fuchsia, I often take another stitch through the gathers on the back, left, and then knot the thread. You can trim the fuzzy edges above the gathering stitch, right, but not too close to your gathering stitches.

Three centers, waiting for the outer petals

Using 1 1/2-inch wide wired ribbon, fold the ribbon in half to find the center, and fold each edge toward that center fold, as above.

Tack the purple flower center to the center of the folded ombré ribbon, using a strong or doubled thread. (Pretend that the white center above is purple, please!) Note that the raw edges of the ribbon is the side where you tack your center. I leave my thread in place.

 
You will do a running stitch in the shape of a diamond as indicated by the arrows above, going through both layers of the ombré ribbon, but NOT stitching the flower center. Be sure that when you come to the points, your thread wraps around the edge of the ribbon, from front to back, or vice versa.

Note that I even need to wrap that thread from one side to the other at the bottom, beneath the flower center, to create the gathers needed to make my petals. Do not knot off your thread yet.

Hold your finger on the flower center and gently pull your thread to gather the top petals. Pull from the thread near the flower, rather than with the needle, to prevent breaking the thread. As you gather, the stitches begin to line up horizontally, and you can gently pull to the side. Gather fairly tightly, and knot it off on the back. Turn the flower over and shape it, using the wired edges.

To make the bud, remove the wire from the light edge and fold the ribbon in half so that the wired edges are together. Take a running stitch in a U shape, from the wired edge down one raw edge, along the folded edge, and up the other raw edge. Gather tightly and knot. Shape it, creating a point on the side opposite the gathers.

Use matching thread and stitch the flowers in place with tack stitches in the gathers, so the stitches don't show. Continue to shape the flowers and use the stitches to keep the flower in shape. Embroider the stems, and you are finished!


So many lovely blooms were created in our class at Primitive Homespuns Wool and Needleworks on Sunday. I can't wait to see some of their finished blocks next month!

Hummingbird and Fuchsia

To read about the other blocks in our In the Garden Block of the Month series, click on the links below. All patterns are available on our website (www.needleseyestories.com), both in digital and hard copy format. The hard copies come with any ribbon needed to complete the blocks, as well as a detailed list of the threads we used. Won't you join us In the Garden?!