OF MATERIALS AND IMPLEMENTS USED IN MODERN EMBROIDERY.
IMPLEMENTS.
Needles. The best
“embroidery needles” for ordinary crewel
handwork are Nos. 5 and 6. For coarse “sailcloth,”
“flax,” or “oatcake,” N.
For frame embroidery, or very fine handwork, the higher
numbers, from 7 to 10.
It is a mistake to use too fine a
needle. The thread of crewel or silk should always
be able to pass loosely into the eye, so as not to
require any pulling to carry it through the material.
Scissors should be finely pointed, and very
sharp.
Thimbles which have been well
worn, and are therefore smooth, are best. Some
workers prefer ivory or vulcanite. Two thimbles
should be used for framework.
Prickers are necessary for
piercing holes in gold embroidery, and also for arranging
the lie of the thread in some forms of couching.
Materials.
Crewels, and how to use them.
Crewel should be cut into short
threads, never more than half the length of the skein.
If a long needleful is used, it is not only apt to
pull the work, but is very wasteful, as the end of
it is liable to become frayed or knotted before it
is nearly worked up. If it is necessary to use
it double (and for coarse work, such as screen panels
on sailcloth, or for embroidering on Utrecht velvet,
it is generally better doubled), care should be taken
never to pass it through the eye of the needle, knotting
the two ends; but two separate threads of the length
required should be passed together through the needle.
Crewel should not be manufactured
with a twist, as it makes the embroidery appear hard
and rigid; and the shades of colour do not blend into
each other so harmoniously as when they are untwisted.
In crewels of the best quality the
colours are perfectly fast, and will bear being repeatedly
washed, provided no soda or washing-powder is used.
Directions for cleaning crewel work are given later;
but it should not be sent to an ordinary laundress,
who will most certainly ruin the colours.
Crewel is suitable for embroidery
on all kinds of linen on plain or diagonal
cloth, serge, flannel, &c. It is also very effective
when used in conjunction with embroidery silk, or
filoselle, either in conventional designs, or where
flowers are introduced. The leaves may be worked
in crewels, and the flowers in silk, or the effect
of the crewels increased by merely touching up the
high lights with silk.
Tapestry Wool is more than
twice the thickness of crewel, and is used for screen
panels, or large curtain borders, where the work is
coarse, and a good deal of ground has to be covered.
It is also used for bath blankets and carriage and
sofa rugs. Tapestry wool is not yet made in all
shades.
Fine crewels are used for delicately
working small figures, d’oyleys, &c.; but there
is also a difficulty about obtaining these in all
shades, as there is not much demand for them at present.
Arrasene is a new material.
It is a species of worsted chenille, but is not twisted
round fine wire or silk, like ordinary chenille; though
it is woven first into a fabric, and then cut in the
same manner. It serves to produce broad effects
for screen panels, or borders, and has a very soft,
rich appearance when carefully used. It is made
also in silk; but this is inferior to worsted arrasene,
or the old-fashioned chenille.
SILKS.
"Embroidery,” or Bobbin Silk,
which has now almost superseded floss, is used for
working on satin and silk, or for any fine work.
It is made in strands, each of which has a slight
twist in it to prevent its fraying as floss does.
As this silk is required in all varieties of thickness,
it is manufactured in what is technically called “rope,”
that is, with about twelve strands in each thread.
When not “rope” silk, it is in single
strands, and is then called “fine” silk.
As it is almost always necessary to use several strands,
and these in varying number, according to the embroidery
in hand, the rope silk has to be divided, or the fine
doubled or trebled, as the case may be.
If rope silk is being used, the length
required for a needleful must be cut and passed carefully
between finger and thumb once or twice, that it may
not be twisted. It should then be carefully separated
into the number of strands most suitable for the embroidery
in hand; for ordinary work three is about the best
number.
These must be threaded together through
the needle, care being taken not to tangle the piece
of “rope” from which they have been detached.
There need be no waste if this operation is carefully
done, as good silk will always divide into strands
without fraying.
In using “fine silk,”
one length must be cut first, then other strands laid
on it, as many as are needed to form the
thickness required. They should be carefully
laid in the same direction as they leave the reel
or card. If placed carelessly backwards and forwards,
they are sure to fray, and will not work evenly together.
With silk still more than with crewel, it is necessary
to thread all the strands through the needle together,
never to double one back, and never to make a knot.
It is intended in future to do away
with this distinction between “rope” and
“fine” silk, and to have it all manufactured
of one uniform thickness, which will consist of eight
strands of the same quality as the “fine”
silk at present in use. As it will, however, still
be necessary to divide the thread, and even perhaps
occasionally to double it, the directions given above
will be useful.
Purse Silk is used sometimes
for diapering, and in rare cases in ordinary embroidery,
where a raised effect is required.
Raw or spun silk is
a soft untwisted cream-coloured silk, used for daisies
and other simple white flowers, or in outlining.
It is much cheaper than embroidery silk or filoselle.
Vegetable Silk (so-called)
is not used or sold by the Royal School.
Filoselle, when of good quality,
is not, as some people suppose, a mixture of silk
and cotton. It is pure silk, but of an inferior
quality; and therefore cheaper. It answers many
of the purposes of bobbin silk, but is not suitable
for fine embroidery on silk or satin fabrics.
It should be used also in strands, and the same remarks
hold good with regard to its not being doubled, but
cut in equal lengths.
Tussore. Interesting
experiments have recently been made with the “Tussore,”
or “wild silk” of India, which bids fair
to create a revolution in embroidery. Not only
can it be produced for less than half the price of
the “cultivated silk” of Italy, China,
or Japan, but it also takes the most delicate dyes
with a softness that gives a peculiarly charming effect.
It can scarcely be said to be in the market as yet,
but in all probability before this work is through
the press it will have become an important element
in decorative needlework. It is much less glossy
than cultivated silk.
GOLD THREAD, &c.
“Japanese gold thread,”
which has the advantage of never tarnishing, is now
extremely difficult to obtain. Being made of gilt
paper twisted round cotton thread, it cannot be drawn
through the material by the needle; but must in all
cases be laid on, and stitched down with a fine yellow
silk, known as “Maltese,” or “Horse-tail.”
“Chinese gold”
is manufactured in the same manner as the Japanese;
but being of a much redder colour is not so satisfactory
in embroidery unless a warm shade is desirable for
a particular work.
Gold and silver passing, a
very fine kind of thread, can either be used for working
through the material, or can be laid on like the Japanese
gold. They are suitable for “raised gold
or silver embroidery.”
Bullion, or Purl, is gold or
silver wire made in a series of continuous rings,
like a corkscrew. It is used in ecclesiastical
work, for embroidering official and military uniforms,
and for heraldic designs. It should be cut into
the required lengths threaded on the needle
and fastened down as in bead-work. Purl is sometimes
manufactured with a coloured silk twisted round the
metal though not concealing it, and giving rich tints
to the work.
Spangles were anciently much
used in embroidery, and were sometimes of pure gold.
They are but little used now.
Plate consists of narrow plates
of gold or silver stitched on to the embroidery by
threads of silk, which pass over them.
The French and English gold thread
is made of thin plates of metal cut into strips, and
wound round strands of cotton in the same manner as
the Japanese gold. If the metal is real, the cost
is of course great. It is sold by weight, gold
being about 20s. per oz., and silver, 10s. per oz.
In addition to its superiority in wear, it has this
advantage, that old gold or silver thread is always
of intrinsic value, and may be sold at the current
price of the metal whatever state it may be in.
Many varieties of gilt thread are manufactured in France
and England, which may be used when the great expense
of “real gold” is objected to. But
although it looks equally well at first, it soon becomes
tarnished, and spoils the effect of the embroidery.
Gold and silver threads are difficult to work with
in England, and especially in London, as damp and
coal-smoke tarnish them almost before the work is
out of the frame. Mrs. Dolby recommends cloves
being placed in the papers in which they are kept.
RECIPES FOR PRESERVING GOLD.
We give here two recipes, which may
be found serviceable. They are from different
sources; the first is a very old one. They may
preserve gold for a certain time.
1. Isinglass dissolved in spirits
of wine and brushed over the thread or braid, which
should be hung over something to dry, and not touched
with the hand.
2. Spirits of wine and mastic
varnish mixed very thin and put on in the same way
with a brush.