modern


You have probably seen the ads by now. Missoni, the famed Italian knitwear designer, is going to have a line that debuts at Target September 13.

But if you’re needlepointer, the exciting news is that you can see a preview of the line right now and get tons of inspiration for your needlepoint.

I found a great one at New York magazine, that has a wonderful slide show of the Missoni line in various room settings. And in the September Style Watch there is some nice coverage with some great stand-alone pictures of the products.

I love Missoni because there patterns can be translated so easily to Bargello, almost with no trouble at all. Take the outfit pictured here.

  • You could use the color scheme on the socks with brown every other row, to create a Bargello in this scheme using your own selection of colors.
  • You could use the simple zig-zag in the socks to do another Bargello in these colors or in others.
  • The solid bron stripe flanked by Bargello in the dress is so compelling — why not use the idea of a wide stripe with Bargello as a plan for a contemporary pillow?
  • You could use the hat for inspiration by flanking a stripe of narrow, colorful Bargello with a light neutral on either side.

And this is from just one of the pictures! Think of the possibilities in the pictures of the whole line.

If you need a Missoni Bargello fix now, I have designed two Missoni-inspired projects that are available free:

I’m so jazzed by this, I’m going to do some new Missoni-inspired pieces.

Related posts:

  1. Missoni Bargello Pillow – High Fashion Inspirations
  2. Bargello – A Major Home Decorating Trend?
  3. The Pink of Perfection
  4. My Life in Bargello
  5. Bargello and Mid-Century Modern Design

Read the original here:
Missoni at Target

In today’s world where everyone is so busy and always looking for ways to save time, it seems a pity that we even need to save time with our scrapbooking projects. Like all other modern technology, digital scrapbooking software was designed to make our lives easier and save us time. It is rather sad though that we even have to save time on our hobbies, which are supposed to be there for us to enjoy.

Read the original post:
Why a Scrapbooker Should Own Digital Scrapbooking Software

If you are looking to make your own wedding flowers, count your lucky stars that you live in this modern age of floral design. In the past, wedding florists had a very difficult life. They had to wire each flower individually! Every rose, every piece of foliage and every carnation had to be wired in order to compose wedding bouquets. All bouquets had to be made in vases or other containers and had to be pretty much self supporting. Can you imagine making floral arrangements, pew markers, bouquets and cake flowers with nothing but wire and tape on your side!

See the original post:
Make Wedding Flowers: My, How Times Have Changed, For The Better!

Originally posted 2009-01-09 06:46:34. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

Liz Morrow Beatles Songbook Bargello Needlepoint

Liz Morrow has been a favorite needlepoint designer of mine for ages. I first started loving her stuff back in the 80′s when she had projects in Needlepoint News.

Recently you’ve found some of her Bargello pieces in Needlepoint Now, including the amazing cover piece in the current issue.

She put up an astounding slide show earlier this week of her Bargello pieces. One of which is shown above. While some of them are pieces stitched from books, the vast majority are her original pieces. I’m crazy about them.

Many of the designs have comments about her inspiration, the materials she used and lots more. I could spend hours here in awe at her work. It was almost impossible for me to find one piece to pick for this post, I’d see one and say “That’s it!”, then I’d find another and another. I picked this one, which is based on creating Bargello patterns from musical notation, because the idea is so cool, so easy for us all to do and the colors are great.

Liz’s work shows so many wonderful things about Bargello. First she really pushes the boundaries of what this simple form of needlepoint can be. Second, she shows us how, just be changing colors in interesting ways or by setting off an area of Bargello against a background how it really showcases this lovely technique.

Go, feast your eyes, and get inspired.

Related posts:

  1. Thanksgiving Eye Candy
  2. Needlepoint Bargello Frame Weight
  3. Creating Bargello – Virtual Book Tour Stop
  4. Bargello and Mid-Century Modern Design
  5. Eye Candy – Bargello Mini-sock

Read the rest here:
Big Time Bargello Eye Candy

Vintage needlepoint pillows from August Morgan

I have often looked at stitched pieces of vintage needlepoint for sale at places like eBay and etsy and wished it could find a good home.

I always feel as if someone should snap it up, add a great back and turn it into a lovely pillow.

Humorous vintage Bargello and needlepoint pillow

An Austin Texas shop, August Morgan, is doing just that. They take vintage pieces of needlework (including crewel and bargello) and turn them into pillows.

Backs, and sometimes fabric borders, are added and each pillow is stuffed with down.

They are superb bits of vintage style, especially if you like mod colors and bold designs. The pillows pictured are typical of what they have to offer.

Best of all you can browse and buy these great pillows on-line.

Heck it’s almost like having a stitching and sewing grandmother of your own in your computer!

Related posts:

  1. Bargello and Mid-Century Modern Design
  2. Parts of a Pillow — Needlepoint Finishing
  3. Vintage Clip Art for Adaptation & Inspiration
  4. Needlepoint Purses Old & New
  5. Kilim Inspired Free Needlepoint Pattern

Originally posted here:
Rescuing Old Needlepoint

Originally posted 2008-02-27 07:30:24. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

I have been struck again and again by the lovely needlepoint done by Carrie Wolf. ou can see it on her blog, Needlepoint for the Modern Home, you can see it on her Etsy store, where she sells her finished needlepoint pieces. I love her clean graphic style and so I asked her to be the subject of this month’s Designer Profile.

Nuts: I love your approach to needlepoint, making it modern and hip. Can you tell me something about your philosophy?
Carrie: My philosophy on needlepoint is a very basic one. I look at needlepoint as fabric. A textile from which I can make virtually anything, any color, any style to fit any taste or aesthetic. With that much possibility, there are really no limits to what I can create. Part of my philosophy is that since needlepoint is so versatile, it can be cool and modern and hip! I am a little surprised that knitting and crochet have made such a huge come-back, while needlepoint has not caught back on with the mainstream public.

So part of my mission is to let people know that needlepoint is very modern and that it is a medium that is evolved and can be in tune with modern design.

Nuts: Your needlepoint cuff bracelets are amazing. Where do you get your ideas for designs?
Carrie:I have been having a lot of fun designing my cuff bracelets. The great thing about these is that they are relatively small pieces that I can stitch up in a reasonable amount of time and use to test out new patterns. My patterns tend to be geometric in nature and how I create them is to sit down with a piece of graph paper and pencil and just start filling in squares (and erasing and filling and erasing) until I come up with something that I like. I was fortunate enough to be able to buy out a needlepoint shop’s inventory of Paternayan wool yarn about 15 years ago, and having all of those colors right in front of me has been the most important design tool for me. I am a very visual person and in order to feel inspired and creative I need those colors right there in front of me so I can play with them and put them together to see what it is I want to create. For me, the creative flow can be such a tenuous thing, that any barrier to it can be hugely detrimental. If I had to go to a store every time I wanted to play with wool colors as I was coming up with ideas, I would be completely stifled. So I am a firm believer that the greater the “stash”, the more unlimited the possibilities are for my creativity.

Nuts: I noticed in looking at the bracelets, you are using many different kinds of closures like lacing, buttons, jeans snaps, I’ve always found it really difficult to attach things to needlepoint canvas, how do you get around that problem?
Carrie:) The snaps, grommets, and studs are something that took me quite a long time to work up the courage to try. Since needlepoint takes so long to create, the last thing I wanted to do was have a great piece that I ruined with a snap gone wrong. So I took the leap with a small test piece and realized that since the structure of needlepoint canvas is so sturdy, I am able to cut the canvas within one strand of the actual needlepoint, so I can create holes in my needlepoint that do not lessen the integrity of the piece in any way. This opened up a whole new realm of possibilities in design and wearable art that I am continuing to explore.

Nuts: The pincushion blocks are also charming. How do you decide what to put on a side?
Carrie:The pincushions have been fun to design and great to use as well.
I like designs that repeat and wrap around the sides of the cube so when it is turns it is one continuous pattern. The pincushion cube was my first 3D needlepoint creation and helped my get out of the “flat” mindset that I had previously had for needlepoint.

Needlepoint can be any shape that you want!

Nuts: Of everything you’ve done, I’m most blown away by the 3-D monarch butterfly. What challenges did this piece have for you?
Carrie:The Monarch butterfly was a design that I had been stewing on for about 5 years before I finally figured it out. I had created the basic flat Monarch pattern and stitched that multiple times, one as a whole Monarch life cycle and another in cross-stitch in beautiful greens and black on green fabric. But I knew what I really wanted to create was a life-sized fully adjustable butterfly that was completely 3D. There is actually a wire armature inside the butterfly that I slipped the individual wings and body over so I could get that real 3D adjustable effect. They really look like they could fly! The part that held me up the longest was figuring out how to create perfectly double-sided wings and body without it looking too bulky and the edges from looking weird. Again, it is the fact that the canvas holds up so well that I was able to clip each wing side close up to the edge of the needlepoint and then whipstitch the two sides together to create the wing pocket that went over the armature. So from this experiment, I have learned that I can make almost any double-sided shape (I have not yet tried convex curves) out of needlepoint with a nice finished edge. I would love to create a dragonfly or even a little bird out of needlepoint.

Nuts: I’m sure many of our readers will want to try their hands at your designs, both small and large, where can people find them? What about your finished pieces?
Carrie: I currently sell my finished products in my Etsy shop:
Modernneedlepoint.etsy.com. I am also working on patterns for sale so people that are interested can check there and contact me if they are interested in a custom pattern.

Nuts: What inspires you?
Carrie:I am most inspired by color, pattern and nature. I live and work in a very natural setting and getting up each morning and watching the birds and walking around looking at the beauty that surrounds me is what inspires me most. The fashion industry is also very inspiring. All that color and pattern and how it relates to the body is amazing and talk about an industry that is ever-changing!
Interior design magazines are also a good source of pattern and color.

Nuts: What’s next?
Carrie:I want to delve further into wearable needlepoint art. The cuffs are a good start, but I would love to use needlepoint in couture clothing, to accent with needlepoint pockets, insets, etc. I also want to delve further into bags and purses. Any other ways that I can create 3D needlepoint is also high on my list of to-do’s. So much stitching, so little time…

Related posts:

  1. Amy Wolfson – Designer Profile
  2. Kathy Schenkel – Designer Profile
  3. Fancy Carole – designer profile
  4. Marie Buffington – Needlepoint Designer Profile
  5. Orna Willis – Designer Profile

Link:
Designer Profile: Carrie Wolf

Originally posted 2008-07-19 11:36:53. Republished by Blog Post Promoter

The 70′s and 80′s had lots of not good fashion things in them, but one trend which wasn’t was the trend for geometrics and, in the 80′s, geometrics in neutral colors.

This fashion trend is one which translated well into needlepoint. Even today you can find incredibly cool modern geometrics. I found a blog post yesterday about the needlepoint of Atlantan Sol Kent. He was unhappy with the needlepoint available at the time, so he designed his own.

Go take a look, the patterns are geometrics of various kinds, but the color schemes are chic neutrals like camel and white, or brown, light blue, white, and light brown.

I just love them.

One of the comments said “I love his pillows, which is surprising, because I am definitely a flower needlepoint kind of girl.” I’m more and Arts & Crafts/bungalow kind of girl, but I have to agree — I love his stuff.

I keep thinking of these in a very mid-century modern sort of house, to make it look less period but still in keeping with those cool straight lines. I have a friend who will be buying a house soon and likes that style. I think these will be an inspiration for the pillow I want to make for her.

Related posts:

  1. Who Knew?
  2. Mid-Century Modern Needlepoint
  3. Lace in Needlepoint
  4. Four Way Bargello in New Shapes
  5. Napkin Rings Using Hearts & Bargello Pattern

More:
Like geometrics?

There are several forms of old-fashioned stitching machines available during this modern time. These machines are especially created to help people accomplish their task with a very short span of time. Although the advancement of technology has made several changes in the manufacturing of sewing instruments, old stitching machines are still in demand during this modern time.

More:
Remarkable Antique Sewing Machine

What is a scrapbook? A scrapbook is actually like a photo album, the only difference is that scrapbooking is a journal of your photos that contains different designs and have lots of captions. Scrapbooking is one of the trendiest craft of the modern day. Communities are using scrapbooking as a hobby, others are using it for their businesses and source of living.

Read the original:
Share Your Memories With the World

pattern from 2010 Bargello Challenge


Bargello Needlepoint has just undergone a major redesign to make it easier to find patterns and to learn about both Bargello & needlepoint. It’s a great site and you should spend plenty of time there.

This year Althea, the site’s owner, has been trying to stitch a new Bargello pattern everyday in the 2010 Bargello Challenge. With half the year gone, she has an impressive array of patterns stitched. These she has classified in useful pages, like the Bargello Diamond Designs that give a brief descrption of this type of design and then show all of the designs in this category in clickable thumbnails. Click on one and you’ll find a page with a bigger picture, information about the source and some other information about the design.

Besides this amazing resource and record of her project, there is also a store with her ebook of ornaments, links to buy printed books, fun merchandise, and several free downloads.

Two other areas of reference information classified by subject provide a comprehensive index to her blog material. They are Bargello Boot Camp and Needlepoint How-to. Both are great places for exploration.

This is one of the cleanest designed and useful needlepoint sites I’ve seen in a very long time.

Related posts:

  1. Bargello Ornament Book Now Available
  2. Bargello Blast-off
  3. Bargello and Mid-Century Modern Design
  4. Bargello Blast-off
  5. Christmas Gift in Bargello

Read more from the original source:
Redesigned & Updated Bargello Site