I had my last exam yesterday! It should be the very last exam I ever do EVER, because next semester is about research projects and clinical placement, but I'm pretty sure I failed it and you have to pass the exam to pass the unit so I'll probably get an email about a supplementary exam at some point in the next couple of weeks. Whatever, at the moment I'm not thinking about that. Instead I'm thinking about my Saxony project! The one that I've been thinking about for years and even have fabric for but I just haven't gotten around to actually working on it. WELL I was just casually looking through the Cranach Digital Archive because I started de-cluttering my room last night. I'm at the point where I've just made a bigger mess and now I'm procrastinating cleaning it up. It's like something exploded, there's so much crap everywhere. Anyway, I was thinking recently that maybe I don't want to have one of those ridiculously wide neckline Saxony gowns, maybe I want one that has a cool high collar dealie. So I was paying particular attention to them when I found THIS:
The only picture I could find when I did a quick Google image search was the teeny one from the Cranach archive, so here it is, watermark and all. BUT LOOK at the design along the edge of the red fabric and around the collar. It looks an awful lot like the kind of designs that you see in Anna Neuper's Modelbuch. They're both from around the same time so that makes sense. But is there any way of knowing whether it was beaded onto the fabric of the dress, or woven as a band that was sewn to the dress? The corner of the collar is really smooth that would suggest beading, but the Cranach paintings are all very stylised, so we can't really say that there was no folded braid seam. Likewise, the bands on the sleeves could be tablet woven bands stitched to the fabric. I don't know very much about these gowns at all really, so I'll have to investigate further. I'd love to weave some trim though, I really enjoyed weaving my last Anna Neuper pattern, and I'd like to experiment with the Japan wire that people keep talking about on the Historical Tablet Weaving Facebook group.
ALSO THIS:
I WANNA MAKE A STUPIDLY EMBROIDERED CAUL. This one definitely looks like beads but I could probably make one using tablet woven bands that match the ones on the dress, like a fillet. Fillets are totally documentable, right? This one looks like there's words of some sort on the front band.
OH OH I could weave some bands and then put BEADS on the BANDS! Then it'll be all sorts of super awesome blingyness! This project is gonna take forever to put together.
In other news, my last day of clinical placement is on Thursday, and then I have three weeks off! Three WHOLE weeks! Except for the three PD events I'm going to, helping a guy with aphasia put together his presentation for a conference, and the meetings at uni about my research project. TOTALLY FREE! I've been chipping away at my embroidery too:
I've done SO MUCH. A whole half motif and a little bit more. There's almost a whole corner! I still need to get some smaller needles, which I might go do on Friday. I just haven't had the time to go to any shop that sells embroidery needles. There's so much to catch up on in the next three weeks!
The only picture I could find when I did a quick Google image search was the teeny one from the Cranach archive, so here it is, watermark and all. BUT LOOK at the design along the edge of the red fabric and around the collar. It looks an awful lot like the kind of designs that you see in Anna Neuper's Modelbuch. They're both from around the same time so that makes sense. But is there any way of knowing whether it was beaded onto the fabric of the dress, or woven as a band that was sewn to the dress? The corner of the collar is really smooth that would suggest beading, but the Cranach paintings are all very stylised, so we can't really say that there was no folded braid seam. Likewise, the bands on the sleeves could be tablet woven bands stitched to the fabric. I don't know very much about these gowns at all really, so I'll have to investigate further. I'd love to weave some trim though, I really enjoyed weaving my last Anna Neuper pattern, and I'd like to experiment with the Japan wire that people keep talking about on the Historical Tablet Weaving Facebook group.
ALSO THIS:
I WANNA MAKE A STUPIDLY EMBROIDERED CAUL. This one definitely looks like beads but I could probably make one using tablet woven bands that match the ones on the dress, like a fillet. Fillets are totally documentable, right? This one looks like there's words of some sort on the front band.
OH OH I could weave some bands and then put BEADS on the BANDS! Then it'll be all sorts of super awesome blingyness! This project is gonna take forever to put together.
In other news, my last day of clinical placement is on Thursday, and then I have three weeks off! Three WHOLE weeks! Except for the three PD events I'm going to, helping a guy with aphasia put together his presentation for a conference, and the meetings at uni about my research project. TOTALLY FREE! I've been chipping away at my embroidery too:
I've done SO MUCH. A whole half motif and a little bit more. There's almost a whole corner! I still need to get some smaller needles, which I might go do on Friday. I just haven't had the time to go to any shop that sells embroidery needles. There's so much to catch up on in the next three weeks!
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