Patterns

Browse “A STORE” categories for items that interest you.  Payment can be made with personal check, postal money order or Paypal.  Send an e-mail to NCcabin@aol.com with your order, your shipping address and your method of payment.  I will respond with a total, including shipping and  sales tax for Florida addresses.  If you choose Paypal, I will send you an invoice.

I’m sorry this is more tedious than the one click purchase option on other upscale sites. This is more like a yard sale–bargain prices, changing inventory, and limited quantities.   You might be surprised at some of the unique items  I have in my stash/hoard/collection!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Heirloom Gown, $8

 

$4 Margaret Pierce’ Ladies Petticoat…click to enlarge

Julie’s gown, $8

$4…Margaret Pierce Collar…click to enlarge

$4..Margaret Pierce Collar…click to enlarge

 

$4~~McCall’s Heirloom Blouses, one size per pattern, available in size 8 click to enlarge

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Belles and Beaus patterns were first designed and marketed by Betty Rast of Alabama.  They were a staple of most heirloom stitchers’ pattern collections. Years later the business was sold to Judith Dobson who added more designs to the collection.  The patterns for sale below are all unused, though a little shelf worn from waiting to be made up.    Intended for hand embroidery, their unique style and techniques can often be reproduced or tweaked with machine embroidery.

The price for each is $8, less than their original price years ago and far less than their value.

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$8…click to enlarge

  • Belles and Beaus
  • Circa 1915
  • 7 Battenburg Lace Patterns,  $8
  • Suitable for collars, blouses, handkerchiefs, household linens, etc.  Directions & illustrations for 7 lace stitches, 2 stitches for attaching lace piece to linen, multisized patterns for square and triangular collars.
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$8….. click to enlarge

  • Belles and Beaus
  • Circa 1916
  • More Battenburg Lace Patterns $8 Suitable for collars, blouses, handkerchiefs, household linens, etc.  Directions & illustrations included for 8 advanced lace stitches, as well as 7 or more patterns in two sizes each, & round and shawl collar patterns for adult and  teen.

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Smocking Design for You

Note:  Heirloom lace edgings and insertions are shown in following posts.  All For Sale items can be found by clicking on the “A Store” category rather than scrolling through old posts.

 

PeachBishoptopX

 

When this peach bishop dress was first posted,   I offered to post my original smocking design for readers.  At last, here it is.   In order for it to be accessible, you may do a screen capture and save to your computer or leave a comment requesting the design and I will e-mail the  .jpg file to you.

My goal was to mimic the Swiss embroidery and French lace on the sleeve caps., to visually continue the pattern into the smocking.  It was a fun and interesting design challenge which I enjoyed.  I was generally pleased with the results.

Note that the graphed design shows bullion tulips while the smocked peach bishop shows 6 cable flowerettes.  Of course, use whichever you like. But you didn’t need me to tell you that.

 

Freelaceedge

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Heirloom Lace Edgings

“Queen Anne, Queen Anne, has washed her lace./ (She chose a summer’s day.)/ And hung it in a grassy place/ To whiten if it may.”  1940 Home Arts magazine cover

Browse “A STORE” categories for items that interest you.  Payment can be made with personal check, postal money order or Paypal.  Send an e-mail to NCcabin@aol.com with your order, your shipping address and your method of payment.  I will respond with a total, including shipping and  sales tax for Florida addresses.  If you choose Paypal, I will send you an invoice.

I’m sorry this is more tedious than the one click purchase option on other upscale sites. This is more like a yard sale–bargain prices, changing inventory, and limited quantities.   You might be surprised at some of the unique items I have in my stash/hoard/collection!

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Heirloom edgings, some French, some English.  1 yard minimum, no increments less than 1/2 yd.  All at least 90% cotton, 10% nylon, some 100% cotton.

E-20…$$1.00 per yard…1/4″ wide…copper

E-20 is so unique.  The color is just spectacular.  A friend used this lace as trim on an ivory linen ring bearer’s button on suit.  It was so lovely.  This lace will gather, but you lose the effect of the cordonnet.  It looks best, I think, flat.

E-2… $1.50per yard…3/4″ wide…white

E-2 This is another versatile lace, good for bonnets, dresses and more.  It was used on the Pink Diamonds pillow, the Zig Zag Bonnet, and other projects.

 

E-3… $1.50 per yard… 7/8″ wide… white

E-3 This intricate pattern was used on Courtney’s 1st Communion Dress and Judith Dobson Tea Dress   .  It is also suitable for boys as there are no flowers.

 

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Heirloom Lace Insertion

Browse “A STORE” categories for items that interest you.  Payment can be made with personal check, postal money order or Paypal.  Send an e-mail to NCcabin@aol.com with your order, your shipping address and your method of payment.  I will respond with a total, including shipping and  sales tax for Florida addresses.  If you choose Paypal, I will send you an invoice.

I’m sorry this is more tedious than the one click purchase option on other upscale sites. This is more like a yard sale–bargain prices, changing inventory, and limited quantities.   You might be surprised at some of the unique items I have in my stash/hoard/collection!

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Minimum 1 yard.  No increments less than 1/2 yd. Available yardage is posted if less than 10 yds.

I-1…$1.00 per yard…5/8″ wide…white

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I-2E…..$1.00 per yard….5/8″ wide…ecru

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I-3…..$1.00 per yard…7/8″ wide…ivory

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Look at Antique Needlework Mags

Do you know of  a 12-step program that can help me?  My name is Janice and I am a Woman of Excess—I eat too much, drive too fast, buy too much fabric and collect with the zeal and regularity of a garbage man.

 My recently recurring nightmare about being invited to appear on the tv show “Hoarders” has motivated me to begin thinning out my extensive collections, starting with these antique needlework magazines.

The first batch is detailed in the following post.   More will be listed as I find the time to itemize them and the willpower to part with them.  They are antique by virtue of my personal definition–older than me.
Each magazine provides immeasurable information, inspiration and entertainment.  The articles and projects  are often classic, thus timely, and sometimes not.

For example, I doubt this would be a popular bazaar item.  As seen in a 1936 article entitled Lazy Days and Busy Days this cleaning set is highly recommended. How would you like this for Mother’s Day?   If looking at this picture is supposed to make me want to roll up my sleeves and get down and dirty with a rag and a bucket of soapy water, it missed its mark.

 

The magazine covers are so charming.  I had big plans tophoto transfer some of these to fabric and embellish them with embroidery and/or quilting.   Wisteria Lesson, as seen in the post by that name,   http://www.janicefergusonsews.com/blog/?p=2655 is the only one I actually did.   But still I hope that some day….
This is one of my favorites.
I love reading the ads for nutrition boosters, newfangled “fireless cookstoves”  and cleaning products.  Here’s an interesting one:

 
I have it on good authority that none of  the University of Florida Gator Boys  use this product–not in fraternity houses, not in dorms, not in off-campus housing.
The historical perspective that can be gleaned from the articles with regard to  the progression of needlework is enlightening to serious students of needlework. Many lovely handwork projects can be recreated so easily by machine.  Designs can be digitized for machine embroidery or simply photo copied for reproduction by hand.
Peeks into the lives of the women of  each era are priceless.  In a  1922 issue  it was said that:
“Everybody plays bridge nowadays–nearly everybody, that is; and every little coterie of friends and acquaintances boasts at least one bridge-club. if  not two or  three, the members of which play hostess in turn.  When the game is over comes the time for light refreshments, when the card-table cover is whipped off, and the luncheon-set substitute: and well pleased is the woman who is able to display something new and particularly interesting along this line.”
Personally, I’m too busy sewing for my grandchildren for bridge.  I do  know a few ladies who play bridge, but no one in my acquaintance belongs to two or three clubs.
These magazines have value for reasons other than those mentioned above.
  • Place one on your coffee table and it can be the source of conversation for an evening–it can be the ultimate  coffee table book.
  • Place an issue for the current month, many years ago, and it can carry conversation for the evening.
  • Leave one in your guest room.
  • Gift your grandmother, mother or aunt with an issue near her birth date or wedding date.
  • Show a copy to your children or grandchildren.  They will be shocked!

If you find these publications as fascinating as I do and would like to purchase one or more  at $10 each, send me an e-mail at NCcabin@aol.com with your order.  See the following  post for  photos of thecurrently  available magazines and brief descriptions of some of the articles.

These are real treasures.

Vintage Needlework Books, Catalogues and Magazines

Browse “A STORE” categories for items that interest you.  Payment can be made with personal check, postal money order or Paypal.  Send an e-mail to NCcabin@aol.com with your order, your shipping address and your method of payment.  I will respond with a total, including shipping and  sales tax for Florida addresses.  If you choose Paypal, I will send you an invoice.

I’m sorry this is more tedious than the one click purchase option on other upscale sites. This is more like a yard sale–bargain prices, changing inventory, and limited quantities.   You might be surprised at some of the unique items I have in my stash/hoard/collection!

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HOME ARTS  and NEEDLECRAFT

192222~05diningtble

22~07poppybedroom

$8…August 1922…..Embroidered collars and cuffs, white embroideries.

$8…August 1922…..Embroidered collars and cuffs, white embroideries.

$8~ October 1922…White table runner with cutwork ribbons, bows and surface emb. baskets, gorgeous embroidered linen towels..white embroideries for table and towels

1923

$8~ July 1923….”table-cover” with inserted medallions and fine crocheted edge…Milanese crochet… handkerchief case… applique luncheon set

 

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My Back Porch

“People in, say, Georgia aren’t sitting on the front porch singing anymore.  They’re inside in the air-conditioning, watching cable like everybody else.”  Charles Reagan Wilson

 

Hummmph!   I don’t know who this guy is or if he has done a statistically accurate survey on this topic,  but I do know that here in central Florida, my family spends a lot of time on our back porch.  We don’t often sing, but that’s out of consideration for the wildlife and any neighbors within hearing distance.   However, that’s not to say we never escape to the air conditioned house to watch cable like his folks in Georgia.

 

We spend a great deal of time out there enjoying a variety of pleasant activities.   I often smock or do handwork while my dear husband and I watch college football game re-runs, each of us in our personal rocking chair.  We are regular American Gothic grandparents.

Here, the grandchildren have tea parties, play with the doll house, build with blocks or do art work on a table in place for that purpose.  Being on the porch together is good family time.  It gives me a nice,  cozy feeling.

What a shame that every home does not have a big porch.  The very word  evokes any number of pleasant images.  I’ve searched the thesaurus but the suggested synonyms, i.e. balcony, deck, portico, stoop, veranda, are architecturally inaccurate.   Nor can they conjure up warm visions of  family and friends enjoying one another’s company, children playing while adults relax with glasses of sweet tea,  grandmother smocking a baby dress…. list goes on and on.  Nothing BAD is supposed to happen on the porch. But who knows what might happen on a balcony or stoop.  I don’t want to think about it.

Of course, there was that unfortunate incident when our black Lab puppies, Jacob and Esau, ate my antique wicker love seat, but that was an isolated fluke/catastrophe that I have chosen to forget.  Mostly.

This is not a great picture. Why did I center the exercise bike?

 I don’t know who Charles Holley is either, but his statement I like:   My vision is to see a nice neighborhood with children playing on the street and people on porches, with smiles on their faces.”  Charles Holley

Our back porch looks over the swimming pool and we do smile as we watch our children and grandchildren splashing there in the Florida sunshine. Well, I smile–Bob is usually in the water in the midst of  the action.

At one end of our back porch is this sitting area and a work table for the grandchildren’s  arts and crafts.

At the other end, near the kitchen, are porch toys, the little tea party table and a doll house.  Also, an old picnic table that Bob put together when he was 12 is our preferred dining spot for cookouts.   We eat there because everyone can be seated on the wooden benches in their wet bathing suits.

I’ve neglected this busy center of family activity for some time now.  The start of my mini makeover is this  quick machine embroidered sunflower pillow. It began its life as a tea towel from one of my favorite sites, www.allaboutblanks.com and was easily re-purposed as a pillow cover.

In February, when I taught at Sewing at the Beach in Myrtle Beach, All About Blanks had a market there.  Their display of products and the samples they had made up were a wealth of inspiration.  Several of these checkered hem towels  in a variety of colors came home with me.

The sunflower embroidery design is from Babylock’s Jacket Backs collection.  The jumbo buttons at the bottom  begged to be included.  The large designs in this Babylock collection are  great for pillows. I plan to make one for Independence Day using a whimsical flag  made up of lady bugs, strawberries, flowers and other patterns.

A dishtowel pillow would make a quick and easy little gift for anyone. My Aunt Aileen lives in a nursing home and might enjoy a seasonal decorative pillow for her bed or the chair in her room.

I might make one each for Laurel and Robert to put on their beds here at our house. On their beds at home, there are so many stuffed animals that making the bed is akin to moving a herd of cattle from one pasture to another. In fact, there are so many that for more than a month Laurel chose to sleep on a quilt on the floor, because there was not room in the bed for her, all of the animals and her almost life size Minnie Mouse!   I’m certain that my darling DIL wouldn’t want more bed decor.  Alastair is too young for decorative bed pillows but his day will come.

This also would be a good beginner sewing project for children—a little measuring, straight stitching, hand sewing on the buttons. Hummmmmm….

I have a lot of ideas for these versatile, stylish towels. What I don’t have is a lot of time. I wonder how many will end up as pillows and how many will end up in my kitchen towel drawer.

Ladybug~Fill in the Blank

ladybugwhole2-001

This is the photo on www.allaboutblanks.com website.

This is the photo on www.allaboutblanks.com website.

 

It comes in pink or white in sizes 12 months to 6. Continue reading

1st Communion Accessories

CourtneyreadeyBible

 

This is a continuation of the previous post about the exquisite First Communion dress Judy Day made for her granddaughter Courtney. Details of the dress, slip and veil were included  there while this post focuses on the extensive accessories–Bible cover, garment bag, hanger and purse–that make the ensemble  all the more special.  In Judy’s  words:

 

bible

 

My parents, Courtney’s paternal  great grandparents, gave her the First Communion Bible. It was smocked and beaded by my mother, Wanda Stewart,  in  the same diamond pattern as the dress.  The beaded cross on the Bible was formed by sewing the pearl glass beads  in place  after the smocking was completed.  The instructions for the Bible cover can be found in the April, 2007 issue of Creative Needle  magazine.  Continue reading

Courtney’s First Communion Dress

Courtneyporchcrop

 

Sewing for children and grandchildren is a true labor of love.  But like birthing a baby, some labors are longer and harder than others.  Always though, the resulting product is worth the effort.

 

CStairscrop

 

 

First communion dresses rank right up there with christening gowns in the expenditure  of labor and love. With the able assistance of her mother, Wanda Stewart, the ensemble that Judy Day created  for her granddaughter Courtney is the result of months of stitching as well as proof positive of  immeasurable grandmotherly love.

The set grew to include so many items—dress, slip, purse, garment bag, hanger, headpiece and Bible cover.  The many interesting and intricate details will require more than one post, so please come back for the final installment.  Each piece is exquisite, so you won’t want to miss any of it.  Continue reading