October 3, 2017
Stitchy Snippets - Applique Art
This beautiful and charming textile art is by illustration artist Mika Hirasa. Combining a collection of antique cloths with decorative embroidery, Mika Hirasa creates playful characters and stories in her art work. Much of her art work is commissioned for advertising and magazines and book covers. Talking about her art, Mika Hirasa states that her 'fabric art gives off a warmth that can only be felt from hand-made works'.
July 11, 2017
Stitchy Snippets- Unusual Suspects
Check out these charming, embroidered pins by Coral and Tusk! These Merit Badges really appeal to my inner child. They certainly deliver cheer on those rainy days with an array of lovely characters and designs. Which one do you like?
Inspired by a love of animals and adventure, Coral and Tusk design a broad range of embroidered home textiles and gifts including endearing, animal pocket dolls!
March 7, 2017
Stitchy Snippets - Animated Embroidery
Now for something a bit different. Irish artist Logan McLain has fused his love and skill of digital art with his passion for textiles by creating animated gifs of his embroidery. Sometimes a message or word appears amidst a whirling background but this textile animation of a lone deer is my personal favourite.
January 12, 2016
Stitchy Snippets - Drawing Threads
Recently I visited the Whitworth Art Gallery in Manchester to absorb the beauty of the textile art exhibition on display. One of my favourite pieces was the work of Do Ho Suh, a Korean artist working from London and New York. Suh's brightly coloured thread drawings were molded and stitched onto lush paper creating many textural elements. Originally stemming from 'doodles' Suh produced this body of work whilst working on his residency at Singapore Tyler Print Institute (STPI).
Do Hu Suh talks about his inspiration for the work. 'It also suggests the life before me, which is the heritage, the history, the culture and the knowledge that has been passed on to me from generation to generation which you cannot visualize ... This is the human relationship I try to visualize with the lines.'
These drawings began as research for sculptures that Suh produced some ten years earlier and through his thread drawings Suh develops those concepts further. 'I was thinking about how we are all interconnected and also the idea of reincarnation and karma. I was thinking about people I would meet or I have met throughout my life ... when you think about it, they are entangled threads. A web of relationships' explains Do Ho Suh. In the work below - Paratrooper-I - Suh has hand-stitched 3000 names and signatures onto linen and draped the drawn strands over the stainless steel paratrooper figure.
Do Ho Suh is well know for his intricate architectural sculptures which are made from transparent fabric. They capture the story of his nomadic adulthood; moving to various continents and cities.
His work reflects his personal journey, the spaces he has occupied and the memories that reside there. Talking about his studio Doh Ho Suh says 'There are so many artists that come and go, and everyday many times a day they touch these things – to flip a switch, to turn the lights on. There are probably many layers of history on the surface of these objects. I want to bring these invisible connections or memories that these daily objects possess.'
March 28, 2014
Win a Spot in a Mastered Class!
Well, I'm excited to announce that the wonderful people at Mastered would also like to giveaway an embroidery class of your choice to one lucky Feeling Stitchy reader! Choose from the 5 gorgeous classes below, and be sure to click each image to see preview videos and more information:
Creative embroidery with Diana Springall

Diana Springall is one of Britain’s leading textile artists and in this course you will discover her unique design process and learn how to devise and stitch your own bespoke creations. The first 100 students to enrol will receive a signed copy of her book: five of those will be selected to take a personal embroidery masterclass with Diana in her UK studio.
Couture embellishment: tambour beading

Learn the couture embellishment technique of tambour beading with world-renown experts, Hand and Lock, the company who Louis Vuitton and other fashion houses turn to for their beadwork and embroidery. Director Jessica will choose one student to complete a work placement in summer 2014.
Goldwork embroidery: couture embellishment

Learn the couture embellishment technique of goldwork with world-renown experts, Hand and Lock. Fashion houses such as Louis Vuitton and royalty from across to the world turn to this 250-year-old company for their expertise in goldwork embroidery.
Textile jewellery: from raw materials to the final piece

Learn how to create truly unique pieces of textile jewellery by hand-dyeing your own materials and turning that yarn into necklaces, brooches and more. Expert dyer Helen Neale, and jewellery maker Anna Alicia are your instructors.
Machine embroidered jewellery

Learn how to use your sewing machine to design and produce beautiful jewellery with textile artist Gilda Baron. Mollie Makes editor Lara Watson is our current guest tutor and will be personally selecting the best designs to appear in a special Mollie Makes feature later in the year.
To win, simply leave a comment on this post - tell us which of these classes is your favorite, and why. Comments will be open until Sunday, March 30, 9 PM CST, when they will be closed and I will choose 1 random winner. This contest is open to all of our readers!
If you have any problems finding the comments, click this link and scroll down to the bottom:
http://www.feelingstitchy.com/2014/03/win-spot-in-mastered-class.html.
Hi, I'm floresita, editor of Feeling Stitchy. I'm an avid stitcher, knitter, and crafter. You can see more of my stitching on Instagram and my blog. My vintage transfer collection is on Vintage Transfer Finds.
Feel free to email me with any ideas for the blog!
September 28, 2013
Interview with fiber artist, Jackie Cardy
Well, you know that moment when you first encounter the web outside of emails and you take the first tentative steps into Flickr 'just to see how it works' and of course you're a bit shy about putting your real name but you're not quite ready and the first thing that comes into your head is the dog's name? Well that's what happened. My lovely now long deceased Daisy is immortalised in cyber space!
Then the blog... I wanted to call it 'Dog Daisy' but someone already had that, then I wanted 'DaisyChains' but that, too was taken so inevitably the ridiculously named 'DogDaisyChains' was born.
Did you embroider as a child? How did you learn your craft?
Oh yes. Like most stitchers I think, I was always making and sticking and glueing and sewing as a child. My idea of School Holiday Heaven was to get a book about crafts from the library and work my way through it making the things in it.
My Grandma taught me how to embroider and my cousin (who I idolised and is a few years older than me) and I, used to sew and draw together. I was always sewing something. I made my first dress at my cousin's house when I was 16... a navy blue with red dots high-waisted puffed sleeved mini dress, 1967. Then I made almost all my own clothes. I was stick-thin and they didn't take much fabric or time. I don't do it now!
I saved lots of offcuts to make little dresses for possible future little daughters but I got two boys so I used the fabrics for patchwork! After I'd had my boys I discovered a City and Guilds Embroidery Class near where I live so I signed on and learnt new skills especially free motion machine embroidery and I've been producing ever since.
Do you prefer to do hand-stitching or machine embroidery?
As I said above, I love free machine embroidery as it gives a fast result in a long process, and defines areas by drawing with the needle, but in my recent work I am doing a lot more hand stitching to enhance the final piece after machine stitching. I have always loved stitching by hand, the sound when the thread is pulled through the taught fabric, and the calming rhythm and the wonderful surface texture it creates.
Do you have any other artistic hobbies?
Embroidery is such a time-consuming process that I hardly dare get into anything else! I have been doing a bit more drawing lately, just mark making with various media to try to free myself up a bit. I used to be very good at it but if you don't use it ...I lost it.
I am very interested in Floristry which I did as a hobby and for church, and recently did the flowers for two weddings, bouquets, buttonholes, table centres and everything. It was a lot of work and although I really enjoyed it my fingers aren't up to it these days.
Of course I am an avid felt maker. I suppose felters might not recognise me as such, because my 'painted' felt backgrounds are just that.. backgrounds for further embellishments in the form of stitch.
I love reading, walking with my little dog, listening to the radio. BBC Radio 4 has a great variety of plays, documentaries and current affairs programmes throughout the day and I always have it on when I'm working. I'm not a very good photographer but I love trying.
Your creations are incredibly beautiful. What is the typical process you follow when making one of your embroidered felted pieces?
Well of course I start with the felt. I choose a base colour and then cut pieces from already part-felted pieces until I've built up a design or pattern that is pleasing. I add other wisps of coloured wool in a painterly way to create interest and depth to the piece and perhaps other lightweight fabrics which will felt in, to create a complex surface.
When the felt is rolled and rinsed and dried I lay a piece of clear plastic on it and using a permanent pen, I draw lines on the plastic where I think I might sew and add extra definition to the pattern. If it goes wrong I start again with another piece of plastic. It cuts down on unpicking or disaster if you plan where you're going to stitch first! Then, keeping the plastic to hand to remind myself, I start stitching on the sewing machine, often placing the plastic back on the fabric to remind myself where I'm going next. I might add hand dyed velvet at this stage, as with my brooches.
When the machine stitching is done, I move to a comfortable chair and sit and add hand stitches such as French Knots and running stitch, seeding, satin stitch and detached chain until I feel the piece is complete. It's a bit like the satisfaction you get from hand quilting.
In other work I might stitch individual motifs and cut them out and create a background of felt to attach them to, or even just attach them to a canvas without a background.
What inspires you to create?
The fabrics and threads themselves make me want to create. I love combining the colours, coming upon an unexpected combination and working with that.
I am also very inspired by the landscape particularly around where I live and walk my dog. I walk along looking at the leaves on the paths in the woods, at the rushes by the edge of a pond, the willow leaves on a bent tree, or the tree trunks with tiny ivy leaves growing up them. Sometimes when I think my work has too many different elements I look at a hedgerow and notice just how many varieties of leaf, flower, berry, stem or grass are growing there, a wonderful confusion of pattern shape colour and texture.
A couple of years ago I was part of an exhibition with poetry as the theme and I took for my inspiration 'The Lake Isle of Innisfree' by WB Yeats for my work, using elements of the landscape in the west of Ireland. Patterns and the work of other artists also gets my creative mind thinking; mid century design, William Morris, African Textiles, just about anything!
Do you have a favorite color (or colors)? A favorite thread?
I have produced a lot of pieces of work using teal, jade, olive, lime and grey, as my response to the poetry theme I mentioned. I looked at the colours of the rocks, mosses, sea and skies of the West of Ireland around the Burren... a great area of barren Limestone rock on the shores of Galway bay. I stay there in early Spring every year while my husband attends a traditional music class and it's magical, so those colours have stuck with me. I think my absolute favourite is pale turquoise/ duck egg blue.
I almost always use Natesh Titania variegated thread on my sewing machine, it's silky and slightly shiny without being too bright it's a nice foil for the softness of the woollen felt. For hand stitching I am using traditional Coats Anchor threads at the moment as well as some hand dyed threads from various sources.
Thank you Jackie, for this wonderful interview!
For more on Jackie, please visit:
Her blog: http://dogdaisychains.blogspot.com/
Her Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/dogdaisy92/
Her Etsy shop: http://www.etsy.com/shop/JackieCardytextiles
Her Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jackiecardytextiles
Hi, I'm floresita, editor of Feeling Stitchy. I'm an avid stitcher, knitter, and crafter. You can see more of my stitching on Instagram and my blog. My vintage transfer collection is on Vintage Transfer Finds.
Feel free to email me with any ideas for the blog!
June 24, 2012
Patterns: Bustle and Sew Magazine
Hi, I'm Jo - I feature new embroidery patterns Sundays on Feeling Stitchy. I also post on our Twitter and Pinterest.
Is there a new pattern you'd like us feature? Email me!
May 8, 2011
What a blowhole
By squishythings in the FS Flickr group.
Dudes, if you're stitching whales, add them to the group. Or start stitching whales and then add them to the group. :-)
September 8, 2010
Colourgirl

Stitched by Sarah Walton
Just posted this on FB, but I thought you guys need to see it, too. Isn't it gorgeous?
Hi, I'm floresita, editor of Feeling Stitchy. I'm an avid stitcher, knitter, and crafter. You can see more of my stitching on Instagram and my blog. My vintage transfer collection is on Vintage Transfer Finds.
Feel free to email me with any ideas for the blog!
May 26, 2010
Nerine's Machine Embroidery
(I like how "Nerine's Machine" rhymes.) To my inbox: a nice note from Nerine about her free-hand machine embroidery on handmade skirts. I especially like this embroidered flour-sack skirt she has for sale on Etsy.Link to Nerine's blog
March 16, 2010
Hello, Hedgies!

How could you not love this pair of machine-embroidered hedgehogs framed in some fun springtime fabrics? Eagle-eyed quilters might recognize some of Denyse Schmidt's hard-to-find Flea Market Fancy prints in the mix. This pillow was made by Flickr user pinkpaisley.
How about you? Have you featured any of your embroidery in your home decor items? Post your links in the comment thread!
November 12, 2009
Our umbrella

Stitched by Laura Amiss
I'm really loving these elegant machine-stitched works, they have such a gorgeous, hand-drawn quality...
Hi, I'm floresita, editor of Feeling Stitchy. I'm an avid stitcher, knitter, and crafter. You can see more of my stitching on Instagram and my blog. My vintage transfer collection is on Vintage Transfer Finds.
Feel free to email me with any ideas for the blog!
April 15, 2009
NLA tower t shirt
Hey, how cool is this? I love the lines of this piece. It has the rough and ready feel of a blind contour drawing. Plus, it's a building, in stitches. Fab.
It is a building in Croydon (London). You can read more about it here, if you're so inclined.





























