An embroidered alphabet: letter N

Embroidered letter N (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

On Tuesday and across town for the last of the informal knitting sessions held at The Holst birthplace Museum. It’s a good walk of a half hour or so but architecturally delightful and never boring as I pass by a score or more of caryatids (in between the shop fronts in Montpellier), scores (most definitely in the plural) of classical columns of all major orders and a blacksmith’s dream of ironmongery (balconies and ornamental railings). When I worked in the library at Balliol College, Oxford, I thought Broad Street the most beautiful road to work in the world (with the Sheldonian by Christopher Wren, the Clarendon building in classical style, the 17C Museum of the History of Science, Victorian, Gothic and not so Gothic college buildings, a glimpse of the Bodleian and on top of the worst building in the street, belonging to Exeter College, one of Antony Gormley’s 7′ nude figures). Cheltenham,  from the Montperllier  Rotunda down and along the Promenade is pretty good too in a more civic sort of way, fine buildings on one side and two sets of public gardens on the other. Both roads terrific but different. But then you can’t really compare apples and pears, can you?

Embroidered letter N (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

The temperature has dropped considerably recently, so the warmth of the Holst kitchen with its coal fired range and the sight of  knitting friends already industriously chatting and working wool was very welcome.  As promised, a Victoria sponge sat centre stage on the kitchen table – yet another beyond-the-call-of-duty production by the curator, Laura. A further one off knitting session was suggested for early December and the curator came very close to promising another series starting in the spring – perhaps one a month. She’s also keen to set up some sort of reading group and possibly also other craft based sessions. I offered to lead one on patchwork, which would be appropriate in a house of this period. Meanwhile back to knitting, which sadly didn’t last long. I began a lesson in cabling but this came to an abrupt halt when we were  stymied by ambiguous (or just plain wrong) instructions in the pattern I wanted to follow. (Fingers crossed that once at home an online search will reveal an amendment to the pattern – but how irritating.) I put down my needles and gave full attention to chatting.

Sketches of various Ns found online

Cooking seems to have become the theme of this week. The grandson arrived with a tin of sticky toffee fairy cakes he’d made with one of his aunts and he and his mother then stationed themselves on the front doorstep to sell them to help save the coelacanth, a fish of ancient origin which is often described as a living fossil. Rain was in the air so we hurried the sale on by buying a few cakes for ourselves, and  a good thing it was too as they were a delicious concoction of various ground nuts and dates. At 40p a cake the passers-by who kindly stopped to buy one and to hear a four year old’s explanation as to why the coelacanth needed saving would not have been disappointed.

Curator Laura Kinnear serving tea

My husband was keen to show the family the Holst Birthplace Museum and fortuitously this Saturday was one of their drop in period cooking sessions. We set off from home just as the rain came – not a little dispiriting for a four year old on a bike. By the time we reached the museum, the bike was balanced precariously across the hood of his sister’s buggy and his steps were dragging. Weary, wet children and museums don’t always make good partners and for a while things were tense. However, being asked to stir the drop scone mixture was a great pick me up for our thwarted cycle rider and he and the spoon were soon  inseparable. Caraway biscuits, after an uncertain first bite, rapidly became firm favourites and three or four biscuits later, we imposed a ban – unsuccessful as the curator gave him some in a little paper bag as we left! My husband meanwhile enjoyed a slice of pale, fruity Queen cake, which included cream in its recipe and had a subtle and delicate  flavour  for a fruit cake (I just had a very little bite!) – why do we still not make this Victorian favourite today?

Family have returned to London but I’m off tomorrow to help with things there. Here is an N which I hope resembles the mosaic N I set out to emulate; the ‘grouting’ is gold thread.

 

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An embroidered alphabet: letter M

Embroidered letter M (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

Now this letter I particularly enjoyed sewing. Once I saw this image, I knew I had to make it my own. How perfect – a letter M in the form of scissors and with the addition of a needle and thread (though I’ll probably be better remembered for having a prickly bosom, dotted and dashed as it usually is by pearl headed pins and assorted embroidery needles). I don’t know where the image originally came from (see below) but it looks quite French to me, both as to colour and form. At first I remembered it as being an enamel plaque but looking at it again, I realise it’s faded card – perhaps a tailor’s or dressmaker’s card to advertise their trade with details on the reverse. Whatever the reality, the image is perfect – strong and stylish. For my M, I decided on simple appliqué of green silk slip stitched to linen with whipped running stitch for needle and thread.

Initial M as a pair of scissors, found on Pinterest

There was another knitting afternoon at The Holst on Tuesday and having got to know each other during the previous sessions   we were all very comfortable together and chatted freely. As she poured our tea and raked the fire, the curator, Laura, was full of apologies for not having produced a Victoria sponge which said she’d promised us last week. That she had produced two lots of biscuits instead, digestive and shortbread (after work and after putting her two children to bed) seemed to us more than enough and quite beyond the call of duty. We’d have all turned up anyway; it’s been such a pleasure to be part of an informal social gathering in such a relaxed setting. It was easy to forget we were in a museum. Lucky us; I doubt cook or the housemaid of 100 plus years ago would have spent hours on end with their knitting in front of the kitchen fire.

Embroidered letter M (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

While most of us knitted, Dawn had brought along a tiny wispy cloud of raw alpaca wool into which she had added minute shreds of blue silk. Quietly she set to spinning this ball of fluffy nothingness into yarn and before long she had us all entranced the simplicity of the process …and her own gentle dexterity. A flick to upend the spindle followed by sleight of hand worth of a magician and in no time at all single ply became 2ply. The resulting yarn was surprisingly substantial for such a small powder puff of animal hair and it was unexpectedly soft and warm to handle too. Suddenly, we were all back in our ancestral hunter gatherer community, imagining the excitement brought by this simple but life changing technology. I’ve just begun reading Kassia St Clair’s The Golden Thread: How Fabric Changed History and I had had trouble envisaging her description of hand spinning – words confuse what once seen is surprisingly simple – but then I’m someone who needs to get their hands going to engage their brain. Below is a photograph of Dawn in action spinning and another photograph of the finished 2ply wool, still wound on the spindle. Hands in action have a beauty all of their own – how much aesthetic pleasure is lost when handwork is superseded by machines. These knitting afternoons at The Holst have been an education, as well as a joy.

Knitting at The Holst Birthplace Museum: spinning with a hand spindle

Knitting at the Holst Birthplace Museum: spindle of hand spun 2 ply alpaca and silk yarn

Last week, Dawn had been one of the people who had taken a photocopy of one of the WW1 knitting patterns, a beanie with a cable decoration. This week she appeared with the item knitted and ready to wear. Though not a hat person she put it on for us to see; it suited her perfectly. I really am not a hat person – wrong shaped head – but even I was momentarily tempted …

Sketches of various Ms found online

Sketches of various Ms found online

Sketches of various Ms found online

Sketching out various forms for each embroidered letter has been an enjoyable exercise. I tend to go for calligraphic letters, highly ornate letters from illuminated manuscripts, Art Nouveau examples, as well as some contemporary ones. I’m no longer so keen on forms traditionally used for embroidery. I keep adding new examples to my sheets of letters so that when I have a monogram to do, there’s plenty to inspire me. Below are a few more embroidered Ms. The first is from an Art Nouveau alphabet I like a lot; the other two are more traditional.

A & M wedding monogram (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

Embroidered initial M

Cushion with monogram M, leaves and feathers (hand embroidered by Mary Addison)

 

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