Roses on a cream T shirt for a 3 year old

 

Rose embroidered T shirt for a 3 year old (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

I have an ongoing battle trying to embroider roses and feel I never quite capture that certain roseness of a rose. Quite often they turn out more like peonies or poppies and even my best attempts have a certain squashed quality as if they’ve been sat upon or have emerged flattened from decades lying trapped between ancient ball gowns in the bottom of a musty trunk. Of course it doesn’t really matter as the roses I add to bits of clothing are purely decorative and not meant to be embroideries of biological exactitude … but, like the search for the perfect recipe for a baked cheesecake, chocolate brownies or aubergine parmigiana, every so often, you just have to have another go! And that’s why, my roses are reserved for children’s clothes and any aspiration I may once have had for the sophistication of  Dolce and Gabbana’s gorgeous multi-petaled bundles of loveliness remains a dream, intangible and just out of reach.

Detail of Rose embroidered T shirt for a 3 year old (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

Last week saw a successful first week back at school for the little ones, though this week feels more momentous as the littlest one will be doing whole days for the first time. Suddenly getting the house in shape and putting bookshelves and cupboards in better order seems possible … and there may even be the odd hour during the afternoon when I can get a bit of embroidery done. How very grown up we’re all feeling!

A sprig of roses – on a T shirt for a 3 year old (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

The roboboot – disliked and beloved in equal measure – is off and we are getting used to a new and softer footfall on the stair. Muscles, ligaments and tendons, awakened from being cosseted in a cosy nest of cushioned fleece and rigid plastic, are at the moment are tending towards inflexibility and even stubbornness but day by day there’s definite improvement. As the weather is mild, warmer and sometimes sunny, I feel I can say with certainty that things are looking up!

Roses on a T shirt for a 3 year old (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

Other attempts at roses:

an embroidered letter O http://www.addisonembroideryatthevicarage.co.uk/2018/11/09/an-embroidered-alphabet-letter-o/

rose embroidered cardigan for a little girl http://www.addisonembroideryatthevicarage.co.uk/2013/10/21/rose-embroidered-cardigan-for-a-little-girl/

rose embroidered baby cardigan http://www.addisonembroideryatthevicarage.co.uk/2013/01/26/rose-embroidered-baby-cardigan/

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Embroidery of Chinese butterflies on a pink T shirt contrasts with back to school plain sewing

 

Pink t shirt with Chinese butterflies (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

Last week, the kitchen table in London was awash with items of school uniform as preparations for the new school year were underway. Clothes needed to be named, some of those already named for someone else need to be re-named and those marked with now-faded permanent marker needed to be made visible once more. Last minute iron-on labels – failing to do what it said on the packet – rather irritatingly also called for stitches. Donated school tunics (made of polyester and viscose and hence almost indestructible) revealed veritably archaeological layers of name tapes as unpicking the top one made visible pinpricks of stitching from yet further tapes beneath – goodness knows how many children had owned them before.  Crisp of pleat and bright of colour, I suppose you could say the tunics had worn well but I couldn’t help thinking how uncomfortable these immortal garments would be to wear.

Chinese butterfly (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

The small person goes from Pre-Prep to Prep School and his uniform changes from Aertex shirt to a more formal style shirt, which would be great except he’s now required to complete the outfit with that most controversial item of male attire  – the dreaded tie. As I write this in Cheltenham I imagine tie tying lessons in London left to the last minute out of shortage of time and/or general anticipation of failure. (Surprisingly, we must have managed to teach my own son how to do his, though he didn’t need to wear a tie until he was 11. He does, however, regularly remind me that I failed to teach him to tie his shoelaces, and how to tell the time, both of which he had to learn from a school friend when he went to primary school. Isn’t learning from peers the Montessori Method anyway?)  Some people never get tie tying and as I look at our small person I have the feeling he will look more ‘ Just William’ than school prospectus. The same goes for his trousers which we could never pass on to anyone else. Even when I’ve slip stitched the hems, and given them the once over the not very old trousers look a bit tatty and very much the worse for wear over the knees.  Hey ho!

Chinese butterfly (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

The smallest person is very excited  at the thought of joining her brother at his school and at the moment is still quite amorous of the idea of school uniform – although that may change when she realises you have to wear it day after day for five days running with no alternative choice. (This is very like of one of my own daughters at a similar age, whose desire for personal control was strong. It was always easier to get her dressed if there was an element of choice – picking one out of just two dresses was sufficient.) Our littlest one has watched her brother leave the house for school for 3 whole years. She keenly felt the front door close on her so, like most younger children she is hyper keen to make the rite of passage and step out there along with her sibling. All adults are very excited too, especially after the periods of family isolation and intermittent home schooling  of the last eighteen months. If both parents weren’t actually taking them to school, I dare say thoughts might have gone towards a champagne celebration.

Chinese butterfly (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

Daughter No 1 is still in her roboboot but it is now flat and walking is easier. Three weeks ago, simple exercises (performed out of the boot) like raising her toes or moving the foot from side to side, would make her cry with pain and frustration. Now, she does these regularly and feels improvement is tangible. All that is good but the boot is still with us for some time yet and as we change seasons, we’re aware of ‘boot’ being an inadequate description for a piece of footwear where the toes are free to the air. We’re just hoping for a dry Autumn, so no wet toes and no damp clammy boot liner to be irritated by throughout the working day.

Chinese butterfly (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

The Chinese butterflies are proving to be a popular T shirt decoration. The smallest person, who had them on a sleeveless T shirt would now like them on something with long sleeves and I have earmarked the decoration for at least another 2 girls – one of which you see here.

Pink t shirt with Chinese butterflies (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

On, I think, Friday, Nature Notes in The Times said robins were beginning to sing again after their silence in summer. This morning I stepped into the garden to hang out the washing and was delighted to hear a robin’s chatty song of extended tics which even seemed to have something of the blackbird about it, so jolly and fluid did it sound. I do love it when something you’ve just read ties in with something that happens to you.

 

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