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Mary Corbet

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I learned to embroider when I was a kid, when everyone was really into cross stitch (remember the '80s?). Eventually, I migrated to surface embroidery, teaching myself with whatever I could get my hands on...read more

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Celtic Cross in Tambour Embroidery

 

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Tomorrow’s St. Patrick’s Day, a great reason to celebrate All Things Irish-ish!

To celebrate a day early, I thought I’d show you a wee bit of Irish Inspiration, in the form of a lovely piece of tambour embroidery worked by a reader.

I really love what she did with the this embroidery pattern!

Using this Celtic Cross embroidery pattern, Kathy worked the design using a tambour hook and Anchor coton a broder. The outlines in black are worked with #12 perle cotton.

Kathy made a great choice for her first tambour embroidery project! The intertwining lines and the circular outside border and the shape of the cross are all particularly well-suited to tambour embroidery, because you can just keep going around the design. Until you get to the point of filling in the tighter spaces (and except for the little round knots), there’s not a lot of starting and stopping – even through there are a few sharp turns.

I especially like the way she incorporated the white into the yellow-gold on the cross design. It’s a very nice touch that keeps the embroidery from looking flat.

If you’d like to try your hand at tambour embroidery, you’ll find further information, tutorials (including a video tutorial), book reviews, and projects all listed in the Tambour Embroidery Index here on Needle ‘n Thread. And you’ll find plenty of free embroidery patterns to practice on, here.

Another option that would work well for tambour embroidery – especially if you like monograms – is the Celtic Knotwork monogram alphabet here on Needle ‘n Thread. The continuous intertwining lines of the letters would work up quickly with a tambour hook!

And if you’re hunting about for St. Patrick’s Day embroidery ideas in general, you might enjoy this article demonstrating very simple (and quick to work!) shamrocks in whitework on green linen. Just find a simple line drawing of a shamrock from online clipart or coloring book pages, and you’re good to go!

Thus endeth the Morning Missive. Have a Magnificent Monday!

 
 

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(15) Comments

  1. Kathy,

    You did a beautiful piece. How will you finish this embroidery? Frame it, make it into a pillow? What is your next tambour project?

    Barbara L.

    1
    1. Thank you to everyone for the kind words! I loved mastering this technique (well, maybe not in the very beginning %#!@$) and was amazed at how quickly the cross worked up. The piece will probably get framed.
      I got started on tambour because I was going to make some small linens for my church’s altar guild (purificators, for those familiar), and my hand-embroidered itty bitty chain stitch crosses just looked really sad. Tambour ought to be much easier to control for stitch size and clean lines.
      Next up is to try tambouring an icon or one of those opus anglicanum saints, so I’m eager for Mary to get going on her Christ embroidery and lead the way with color choices and guidance.

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