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Hoop love

A little while back I received a spate of emails and messages from people telling me how much they loved the hoop and stand that they had bought from me. Here’s an example:

“Just wanted to let you know how pleased I am with the embroidery stand and hoop. So glad you recommended it… it makes the “job” so much more comfortable.”

embroidery hoop with standYou’ve probably heard me wax lyrical before about the hoop and stand sets that I sell. I sell them simply because I love them and I think that they are a GREAT product. You can see that I was using mine in yesterday’s picture of the Schwalm embroidery.

Why do I love them so much? Let me count the ways… 🙂

  • You don’t have to hold the hoop yourself, as the stand does it for you. This leaves both hands free to hold your needle and manipulate your thread. Occasionally I come across a customer who has movement issues with one hand. These hoops with stand are the perfect product for that, as the stand acts as an extra hand for you.
  • You can flip the hoop up to easily get to the back of the work so that you can anchor threads or check for unwanted thread tangles. (see picture F)
  • You can turn the hoop so that you can access a different part of the stitching. (pictures B and C)
  • You can move the whole hoop up and down so that it is right up close, or a little lower down. (picture D)
  • The hoop is strong, sturdy and deep. When you’re working with thin and flimsy fabrics, this isn’t quite so important. But when you’re working with a heavier embroidery such as Mountmellick embroidery, you want to know that the hoop won’t warp or even pop off. At the recent craft show, one customer said that she loved using hers with a big woollen blanket that she recently made. It took the weight of the heavy blanketing off her, and she said she couldn’t have managed without the hoop and stand.
  • The wood is lovely to look at and very smooth to feel. The look and feel says quality, and it is quality.
  • The kidney shaped base goes under your legs either from the side, or between the legs – whichever feels more comfortable. I use mine between my legs. This gives the hoop a great stable base. You can use it on pretty much any sort of surface. I regularly use mine while sitting on the pudgy lounge, but it also works on harder surfaced chairs, such as wooden benches (at the swimming pool!) and kitchen r dining room chairs.
  • The whole thing is small enough to be portable. I regularly pack mine up into a tote bag or backpack and take it with me to my daily activities, so that I can happily work on my embroidery while I am waiting for children, sitting on a train etc.
  • One small detail that I particularly love is the tightening screw, which has a slot for a screw driver. This means that you can REALLY tighten the hoop – without it, fingers just can’t get a hoop tight enough. I don’t actually use a screw driver for tightening mine; I have a small metal ruler that I slot into the grove to tighten with. It means I don’t have to carry a screw driver with me (I sometimes wonder if that could look too much like a weapon when I am out and about!) but instead I always have a ruler with me which is useful for measuring! (see picture E)

You can probably think of other reasons you love your hoop and stand for – so please share them with us. And if you haven’t tried one of these fantastic products yet, head on over to the Vetty Creations website embroidery hoop and stand page, and ensure one is on its way to you!

If you’ve never used a hoop before, Mary Corbet has some excellent information about setting up a hoop, over on her wonderful blog.

July 5th, 2012 | Category: embroidery musings, favourite needlework items, hints and tips | Leave a comment

Schwalm progress

I thought you might like to see a photo of my much enjoyed Schwalm project. It is designed by Luzine Happel, and I am working it to test her left-handed instructions for it. It is extremely enjoyable to work, and oh, so pretty!

schwalm embroidery

July 4th, 2012 | Category: embroidery musings, Ethnic embroidery, making stuff, whitework | 21 comments

gym tear down and more Schwalm

The gym tear down went much quicker than anyone expected yesterday. I got there at 8:30am and there were about 6 guys working hard, having already taken down all the uneven bars sets. My first job was to start ripping up the velcro joining strips on the matting between the beams, and then to roll them all up so that they can be reused. The next job was to take the padding off the parallel bars supports and the beam supports. More velcro!

Then there was lots of sweeping of all the floors, as all the mats came up and were stacked. The quantity of old strapping tape, bandaids, hair elastics, bobby pins, scrunchies, chalk dust, I have never seen before! In all we collected 60c in small coins throughout the morning. A 60c cent rebate on the cost of the gym! It won’t go far…

And then there was more ripping up of velcro from the floor apparatus. So much velcro! I was chatting with the head coach, and he asked if I knew where velcro originated from. Yes, NASA. He said they’d invented it to be able to fix things in place in zero gravity. I don’t suppose they realised that it would be so extensively employed in gymnastic equipment in the future. It made me wonder how they ever constructed a gym without it!

With about 15 people – gym staff, coaches, parents and the construction contractor – we had it all done by 10:30am. They had allocated a day and a half to the tear down, and we did it in 3 hours! The floor still needed to be moved, but that will be a slow job for only two people, of carefully undoing bolts, moving sprung floor sections one by one and carefully doing up bolts again, so they didn’t need us for that.
empty gym

The emptied gym. The sprung floor still to be moved is in the foreground, and the equipment is all stacked to the right. In the background, the pit is all still intact. Thankfully we didn’t have to empty the pit of all the foam blocks – that would have been a horrible job! (The pit is a big hole filled with foam blocks that the gymnasts can vault into, or dismount from bars into. The foam provides a very soft landing.) My daughter’s coach talks of the snakes and spiders that live in the pit. While I’m sure there are no snakes in there, there are certainly spiders, dustmites and many other skin-crawling creepy crawlies!

As I sit here typing this, I’ve realised how sore my torso muscles are, so obviously they got a good workout yesterday! It will be interesting to see the new layout of the gym being constructed over the next two weeks. Each day we arrive for training, there’ll be more to see.

Last night I did some more Schwalm embroidery, working my way through a few more of the openwork motifs. I’ve never done this much drawn thread/pulled thread work before, and I’m really enjoying it. I am quite close to getting through all of the instructions, I think. I haven’t actually read ahead the whole way yet! However, I will only have completed one quarter of the whole design. I’m not sure if that will be sufficient for Luzine’s purposes at this time, so that I can finish it later. I hope so – I have so many other projects to work on!

July 3rd, 2012 | Category: embroidery musings, making stuff, whitework | 2 comments

Schwalm weekend

Over the weekend we continued with removing the paint from the brickwork at the front of our house. It was slow work, and it is looking very different. We’ll get there some day!

In my down time, I got stuck into doing some more work on Luzine Happel’s left-handed Schwalm project. And I must day I AM LOVING IT! I moved on from the coral knot stitch to working the chain stitch outlines, just inside the coral knot stitch, and then I gave myself a real treat: I started work on the pulled thread embroidery.

What fun! I have had such a good time working it, and really enjoyed it. I’ve decided that coral knot stitch is NOT my favourite stitch, and while there’s an awful lot of it in Schwalm embroidery, there are lots of carrots after all the coral knot stitch to look forward to.

Luzine’s instructions are excellent, and while I’ve found a few things that will need to be fixed in them, that’s exactly the point of her getting some people to test stitch her instructions!

School holidays have started now, and so we’re all at home for the holidays. Today will be a bit different – I’m off to the gymnasium to help with a complete dismantle of all the gymnastics equipment. They’re taking the opportunity of fewer people around in the holidays to completely reconfigure the gym. I’m not sure how many aches and pains I’ll have by the end of the day, but it will probably will be a great excuse to sit and do some quiet embroidery!

July 2nd, 2012 | Category: embroidery musings, embroidery stitches, making stuff, whitework | Leave a comment

End of financial year

Tomorrow marks the end of the financial year here in Australia. I shall spend some time today, tomorrow and Monday doing a proper stocktake. I’ve never actually done a proper one before (I’ve only ever estimated), so it will be a boring but useful thing to do!

For those of you who are financial-type people, I hope you have a lovely time seeing the new year in! 🙂

In other news, we’ve been doing some work on the house this week, which is why I haven’t had much to say here. My husband’s school has already started school holidays (the girls finish the school term today), so we took the opportunity to get some much needed work on the house done. We’re removing the paint from the brickwork on the front of our house.

The previous owners painted the front of the house many years ago. On speaking with their daughter the other day she said “I don’t know why Dad ever did that.” No, we don’t either, and I wish he hadn’t!

My husband removed some of the paint from some of the bricks some months back. It has had a huge effect, finally allowing the brickwork to dry out for the first time in years! We’re hoping that taking the rest of it off will allow more of the house to properly breathe!

June 29th, 2012 | Category: Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Italian review of Portuguese Whitework

For those of you who are conversant in Italian, there is a new review of my book available at Tutto Ricamo.

An excerpt (not a great translation, but it gives you an idea, at least!):
“Even a beginner, following the excellent instructions, can make virtually all the projects in this book!”

Thanks to Tutto Ricamo for a lovely review.

Thanks to Jeanine of Italian Needlework for letting me know about the review. For those of you who are not yet acquainted with Jeanine, she’s my window into the world of all things Italian needlework! She has an excellent blog, and you should check it out!

June 27th, 2012 | Category: book reviews, Portuguese embroidery, Portuguese Whitework: Bullion Embroidery from Guimarães | 3 comments

1st test build of app

Yesterday morning I installed the first test build of my stitch dictionary app on my phone. It wasn’t entirely a success, but its a start! I can see that in time, with a lot more work from both me and the developer, it will be excellent.

This is a new process for me, creating an app. It is also the first time in a long time that I have been someone else’s client. Normally I work by myself on a project, so working *with* someone is a bit different.

I still have to extract the text from my book files, and re-save every single picture from the book into a format that the app can use. It is a time-consuming and dull process, but it has to be done! There are no minions I can palm it off to!

The developer is working on translating my design ideas into fully functional parts of the app. I am learning about the limitations of app design – there are some things you just can’t do. Learning what is and isn’t possible is part of the process.

We have a long way to go yet, but we have a tangible start!

June 26th, 2012 | Category: stitch dictionary, The Left-Handed Embroiderer's Companion, The Right-Handed Embroiderer's Companion | 4 comments

Portuguese Whitework class in Sydney

Portuguese Whitework panel class with Yvette StantonFor those of you in Sydney and the surrounds who have been patiently waiting for a Portuguese Whitework class, you’ll be pleased to know that I will be teaching at Lyn’s Fine Needlework at Baulkham Hills on 30th July 2012.

The class is a single day class, and we will be working the framed panel from the book.

I mentioned the possibility of this class to many at the Sydney Craft and Quilt Fair, and many were very pleased to hear of it. It is therefore likely that places will book quickly. If you would like to book, please contact Lyn’s Fine Needlework to secure your place.

Lyn’s Fine Needlework
Shop 2/9 Seven Hills Road
Baulkham Hills NSW 2153
Ph: 9686 2325

June 25th, 2012 | Category: Embroidery classes, historical embroidery, Portuguese embroidery, Portuguese Whitework: Bullion Embroidery from Guimarães | 3 comments

New 38 count linen

Graziano Pronto Ricamo linen, 38 countIf you’ve been eyeing off the 38 count linen that I supply, you’ll have a pleasant surprise today. Possibly the first thing you’ll notice is that the price has dropped! This is because the linen is a new product – just as lovely – but with a lower price.

Graziano discontinued their Nuovo Ricamo linen and replaced it with Pronto Ricamo linen. Both were/are 38 count, both were/are gorgeous, but the new linen – Pronto Ricamo – has a lower price.

So if you’re looking for Nuovo Ricamo, I can no longer supply you with it, as I sold everything last week at the show. Fortunately, the replacement linen arrived with a thump on my doorstep yesterday, so I was only without stock for a few days!

So, if you’re looking for 38 count linen for Portuguese whitework, you can now purchase beautiful Graziano Pronto Ricamo from the Vetty Creations shop.

Milliners/Straw needles No 4I also ran out of Milliners/Straw No 4 needles at the show, and now have restocked with lots!

June 21st, 2012 | Category: new products, Portuguese embroidery | Leave a comment

a new project underway

Yesterday I went to my local needlework store to purchase some thread to go with the fabric I bought at the craft show. This will be for one of the projects in the new book. Ever since I saw the fabric and considered the possibilities for it, I’ve been itching to get started on it!

So last night I prepared my fabric and put needle and thread to it. Yay! I’ve made a start.

My plan for this next book is to shock people a bit! When you see what I’m making at the moment, you’ll probably understand how I plan to do that. But I’m not giving out any little clues just yet… 🙂

The app development is continuing by my app developer. Which reminds me, I suppose I had better continue preparing more files for him. Definitely not as interesting as embroidery!

June 20th, 2012 | Category: designing, embroidery musings, making stuff | 3 comments
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Yvette Stanton White Threads is the blog of Yvette Stanton, the author, designer, publisher behind Vetty Creations' quality needlework books and embroidery products.

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