Hamsa embroidery
I've also been doing some embroidery. It started back in the spring of 2014, when I began doing a variety of embroidery stitches on my "Plain Spoken" quilt. I eventually ripped out all that embroidery on that quilt because I didn't like the look of the varying stitches on this quilt. But I did like doing the embroidery. I used some of the stitches for borders on hand-dyed napkins.
And I've also used them on a series of embroidered hamsa gifts. A hamsa is protective/good luck amulet, common to Middle Eastern cultures. I made two for friends in cancer treatment. The first was incorporated as a block into a quilt made by friends. The second hangs from a loop of thread.
This fall, I made four more as gifts for several adults in my congregation who I tutored for their collective b'nai mitzvah ceremony this November. This first of these I did in a class with Laura Wasalowski, fusing pieces of my hand-dyed fabric.
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I liked the look of the applique, which gave a multi-color base on which to embroider, but I didn't like stitching the embroidery through two or three layers of fused cloth--very difficult to get the needle through. So, I did the three others with needle-turn applique, no fusing.
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Before changing to applique, I had stitched a blue outline on some violet cloth. So I've continued stitching that one.
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Difficult to see, but I used shiny gold thread for some of the stitching in the outer fingers. Looks nice in person! |
Before making the recent series of hamsot (Hebrew plural of hamsa), I tried out a variety of stitches that I could use as a reference for myself as I chose stitches. After checking out several embroidery books from the library, I bought one that had clear instructions and a large number of stitches, the Reader's Digest Complete Guide to Embroidery Stitches. The page numbers noted on my sampler reference that book. I haven't yet made it through the whole book, but stopped when I had plenty to use on the hamsa project.
Lovely work and you sure got your practice in. I find embroidery very soothing and relaxing.
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