View allAll Photos Tagged MachineEmbroidery
Dense machine embroidery using wool thread on canvas creates contours
Explorations in 3D embroidery
31cm x 70cm
Pick up the marketing ideas that suit your business and be persistent with them. Don’t just try them, test them with different variants and you will gradually see your bank account bulging up.
From getting control of machine to some lovely creative freehand machine
embroidery with Claire Humphries.
This one is for the Counsellors!!!! They need a little cheese with the whine they hear all week.
These badges are made using patterns from emblibrary.com. Stitched out on upcycled denim jeans.
More details on my blog twasbrilligand.blogspot.com/2011/06/summer-camp.html
Surprise present for my boyfriend, he love his mac computers.
I've digitized the apple logo myself. Sewn out with variegated white-grey embroidery thread. The bag is made of white pvc (hence the puckers...) and the pink bag is a cd protective case made of fleece. I hope he's ok with pink, haha, as all the materials I used is from my home.
I like to add small triangles to the top corners, during the binding process so I can insert a dowel for hanging.
www.etsy.com/listing/247942448/family-7-x-11-machine-embr...
Baseball applique design on blue nylon with orange stainless steel reusable water bottle. The baseball fabric is two layers of white nylon. Adjustable strap is black nylon. Stitched in shades of blue and orange for a Mets fan.
Working on some notebooks for workshops planned at Materialise in Edinburgh www.lovematerialise.com/
blogged here: deepthoughtsbycynthia.blogspot.com/2009/09/bernina-design...
The flower is made into a patch with a button hole and simply buttoned on her headband.
It was while I was thinking about the theme of “On the threshold” that I looked again at William Hogarth’s “The Rake’s Progress” and that started me on a long and involved journey looking at societal attitudes towards acceptable behaviour in both male and females.
Hogarth’s previous work, “The Harlot’s Progress”, depicts the fate of a country girl who begins in prostitution and ends in a funeral ceremony that follows her death from venereal disease, whilst the fate of the Rake, the son of a rich merchant, is to end up in a mental institution
The Harlot is shown as initially innocent but is lured by a procuress and then is shown to be suffering from syphilis sores and ultimately dies. By contrast the Rake, after enjoying a hedonistic life, is released from debtors’ prison by his childhood sweetheart, but who then continues on his downward path to his eventual incarceration.
Society, it seems, finds different rules and different punishments for the sexes.
I decided to combine the two themes and to produce my version of a female “rake” who enjoys the hedonistic life, to the disapproval of society, but who ultimately lives a fulfilling and successful life.
The collaged and painted boards on which the story is told have similar paint treatments but I have varied the applied fabric backgrounds and added hand and machine stitching to suggest a varied and unusual life. Colour is all, and increases in depth and richness as the story unfolds.
Hoodie and pants, cool and cosy style with embroidery applications
(File "cosmicgirl" by Hamburger Liebe at kunterbunt-design.de)
Learn all the textile techniques you need to make stunning textile art landscapes at www.colouricious.com/shop/fabric-painting-embroidery-text...
Made with leftover fabric scraps from a previous project, vintage buttons and emellished with some decorative machine stitches. See blog for further details. thesewingattic.blogspot.com/2011/03/getting-organised.html