How To's
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Monday, 14 January 2019
Woollydale Kit Designing
I've had ideas for this kit floating around in my little head since a sheep themed kit was requested at the Kent County Show in summer last year. People who attend agricultural shows clearly have sheep in mind when they visit any stand present and 'do you have a kit with sheep in?' was one of my most asked questions. I like to keep my customers happy and I just so happen to know of a really fun sheep themed print designed by Rose & Hubble (the link there is to Wool Warehouse who are one of my favourite stockists but others are available) which I have used a couple of times before in my Seven Sisters Stitchscape and in a #inthehoop mini Stitchscape- which is sort of what this kit is loosely based on.
Since then I've been collecting fabrics that I think might go with my green sheep, I wanted to get a good variety of patterns to make it more exciting for kit-goers to work on, especially as there are going to be a LOT of greens!!
As with any kit, it starts with my laying the fabrics out to get a sense of the order they should go in and how the colours will balance each other out. A lot of this is subconscious, but you can see how the subconscious makes up its mind when you think about it. The top layer has white and blue in- the white is repeated halfway down the piece and the blue is mirrored at the bottom. Dark green at the top gives way to mid greens in the middle before dark green at the bottom again. It all balances out and helps to create a really lovely sense of perspective and harmony.
Once the fabric positioning is set, I will cut into them and create my shapes. I knew I wanted a kind of big mountain right at the back to help make a sense of being in a valley, but the other two greens are just kind of wiggled at the top. The sheep fabric is also wiggled but I couldn't decapitate any sheep so I have specially cut around them- something that I will suggest those making the kit to also do.
I have used a green jute ribbon which I have previously used in my Spring Ladybug Stitchscape kit which is sold through the-stitchery in Lewes. This is really fun because it starts out as a closely woven tape but can be teased apart to create open weave, thick sections however you like. Many people thought that when it was used in the Ladybug kit it was some heavy duty stitching and the fact that it is just a stitched down fancy ribbon was a complete surprise!
I also decided when I had finished tacking down all of these fabrics that it needed something at the top (again with the balancing thing) and had a rummage in my draw until I found a Trimits lace ribbon which fits in perfectly!
Kit making is a laborious process. Before I stitch anything down I have to draw around the fabric pieces so that I can make the template page in my kits, all ribbons and laces have to be measured and this is all noted down on my high tech piece of paper.
Every thread I use is counted and noted in a little notepad, layer by layer. My threads are cut at 60cm precisely so I can easily measure what I'm using, and then in my kits the threads also come pre-cut at 60cms. Even with all of this counting and noting down, I still want the kits that you guys make to be unique to you, which it really will be with this kit. The sheep placement will be up to you, and because of the random pattern/colours in the blue batik pattern at the bottom, this will affect what the bottom of your piece will look like and where you position your reed flowers. I allow a little bit extra for additional stitches you may have to make, as well as any mistakes or tangles you might get into, by providing an additional 60cms of thread per colour used which hopefully should be enough.
I like to show the back of my pieces because I find in my classes, students get a little worried about carrying threads across or making any knots. I admit, I am a knotter. I knot my thread before I start and I knot it again when I finish, I occasionally (regularly) get threads in a tangle at the back which I don't notice until I've stitched over them, and I also carry threads between stitches. Unless you will be displaying the backs of your pieces, or you are stitching on a particularly thin fabric, it doesn't usually matter if you also do these things. My stitchscapes will have at least two layers of fabric at any one time because I use a backing fabric and then layer up on top so this helps to disguise dark threads underneath.
I completely unpicked one of these layers because I didn't like it, and half unpicked another (twice) because I didn't like what I was doing. Can you tell where? If you follow my Instagram or Facebook accounts you can compare the stitches from start to finish. Initially I was unpicking the reeds and plant life on the bottom layer. Once I had made the reeds with their zesty green bullion knot flowers, it needed something else to help bed the stems in. I originally tried pistol stitches, but couldn't find the right colour, I tried a blue but it looked awful, then I tried a different green but it was too much; too heavy (I used two strands), too nondescript, too light (it was a light green). Eventually I decided to use a single strand of the green I had used in the sheep layer and make fly stitches which worked really well. But I had previously used a chunky DMC Coton Perlé thread to make fly stitches all over the plain green layer above the sheep which now looked clunky and repetitive.
I went away and had lunch to think about something else for a while but still hated it when I came back so out the stitches came!!
Instead, I covered the fabric with seed stitches using an Anchor thread, and then put back in the DMC Coton Perlé with two twist french knots covering the lower half of the lace and meandering down into the fabric layer itself. Much better.
I love how this fabric at the bottom looks like a lazy river trickling along the bottom of this piece. The different blue colours make it look like it's moving and rippling along, or shadows of rocks beneath the surface. This is one of the fabric layers that will be completely different with every single kit as the batik pattern has different blues and some elements of brown in it.
The sheep are, of course, always amusing as they drunkenly roll down the hill. I have always treated this fabric in the same way with white french knots for the woolly coats and enhancing the legs and head with black threads. I think they are real characters and each kit will likely have slightly different placements as you can turn the fabric how you like and select different sheep to focus on.
The mountain looks completely different from when it first started out as I have used stem stitch to go over the swirly lines of the pattern, and a different coloured thread to french knot the buds. It always amazes me how colour choice can so totally affect a fabric.
So, all I have to do now is write up the pattern, make pages of how to create the stitches, create a front cover, paginate all pages so that they are readable and make sense, perhaps draw more diagrams, scan in the template pieces and make that into a proper page, print the pages and staple them all together, cut the threads to length, create thread cards, cut all of the fabrics to size, put all of the elements together, package it all up, work out the prices and advertise it! Easy peasy.
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