Tuesday, 10 December 2024

incomplete

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Suddenly the month is slipping away fast and I have ton of tatting to do. I hadn't been able to tat for almost a month due to life interruptions which put me back a whole lot. Prioritizing is the need of the hour or what's remaining of this month. 

This is the Vandkye Border in Tatting by Mrs. Ollie Romesha which I had hoped to complete before showing. I've decided to postpone it's completion hence sharing the WIP pic. It was published in Needlecraft Vol. VII, No. 8, April 1916 and the PDF can be downloaded here -https://www.antiquepatternlibrary.org/html/warm/tatting.htm   

Vandyke formations are inspired by portraits painted by 17th century Flemish artist Anthony van Dyck and refer to the distinct peaks or points like in the V-shaped chevron strips. I decided to go with this edging despite the bare thread space that kind of terrifies me. Then there was the headache-inducing task of transcribing the old text into short notations or diagrams. I took the plunge! 

However I tatted the flower medallions first unlike what the instructions stated. Decided it would be more comfortable when joining. 

There is one minor omission in the written pattern (part of the pattern is missing). The image of the tatted model was of great help.

The sewing side consists of single shuttle work with lots of bare thread. I started at the right to gauge the length of bare thread. It turned out to be a wee bit tight when the final row is tatted above. Started afresh at the left end, but have left it for the present. Once my other time-bound commitments for this month are done, I'll get back to this and share more details. 
Worked in Anchor size 40.


I am submitting this for Natalie Rogers' PICOT Bingo game, striking off the block - Tat an Edging. Now this game is another project I probably won't be able to complete despite starting in January itself. At least not in the way I wanted to. But never say die, LOL. 

11 comments:

  1. It’s really beautiful. It’s a lot of work to convert an old pattern into modern notation. Yes, it’s tricky to get bare thread spaces exactly right, as I discovered on the Teiko project. Too long and it looks scruffy, too short and the work will be distorted. Gives a lovely airy look though, so worth the effort.

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  2. Beautiful tatting! Patterns like that are evergreen, love it!

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  3. I love the edging! Converting patterns can be a full time task.

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    1. Not trying to be anonymous.....Google was just being lazy.

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    2. Google in getting into grinch mode probably 😁 Mel, working from scratch on this edging has given me some confidence to try out some more when I can mange the time. 💖

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  4. I love the work you have completed so far. I appreciate your time & effort for sharing.

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  5. Muskaan, I hope your personal affairs have settled down? All is well? Very beautiful! The old masters often used one shuttle for the work. And in our time I would make the central motifs with Split Rings.

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    1. My hobby mind wants to go at warp speed while my body vetoes it - that's about the state of my affairs, Anonymous 😁 I deliberately went full vintage for this project, preferring to tat the daisies with one shuttle, two rounds as per pattern. Wanted to keep the look as vintage as possible, hence white thread too. 🩷

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