SINISTER STITCHES
CURRENT PROJECTS - DEADLINED
KARA'S CUFFS

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KARA'S CUFFS

Updates:

 

September 14, 2008:

When Uther won for Kara at June Crown, I offered her my assistance to make something - anything - for her reign. Kara is one of the sweetest people I have had the privelege to know in the SCA and I really wanted to help her look spectacular. After some long deliberation, she decided on a pair of cuffs done with the Jane Seymour pattern in black silk on white linen. Awesome!
Although she wanted them for October Crown, I didn't get everything assembled in time. Although the embroidery is going quickly, it is not quick enough, and I won't finish the cuffs until some time in October. Poo! :(
But it has been a fun project thus far. I lashed the linen pieces into a scroll frame and sewed a pair of knitting needles into the hems so I could have a smooth field to work on. I decided to use Needlepoint Inc. silks since I've read they're colorfast and had a great time using them on Sabrina's mantle patch. I am having some difficulty with using one thread, as it tends to fray something fierce. Yuck!
So - some history. This cuff pattern was drawn from Hans Holbein the Younger's (ah, my favorite!) portrait of Jane Seymour, painted in 1536. Per his usual awesomeness, Holbein painted Jane's cuffs painstakingly enough that a clear pattern can be seen. Lorraine Behrens took the time to zoom in, chart away, and present us with this lovely rendition of the pattern. Yay Lorraine! You rock. Cuff pattern
And you know, the more I work with this pattern, the more I'm convinced that it's German. It is so very much like the other Holbein patterns that I've worked with (from his Anna Meyer portrait) that it can't be a coincidence. The two lines of mirrored patterns, the prevelance of crosses, the ric-rac lines - everything point to this being German.
So there are a few possibilities. One is that Holbein painted a pattern he remembered from his homeland. Another is that he used a pattern from any old pattern book available in London at the time, which were conglomerates of styles and crossed borders freely. Another comes from my fighter Baccus, who suggests that it could have been a political move. As Henry was out of favor with the Pope at the time, he was trying to curry favor with the increasingly powerful Martin Luther, who was, in fact, German. This is possible; we know Tudor embroidery could be political, as the Moorish Spanish blackwork patterns exploded in popularity once Henry married Catherine of Aragon. Could this be another instance of politics meeting art? We may never know.
Back to the project. As you may or may not be able to see in this picture, I'm most of the way done with one cuff. It does go quickly, particularly when doing the return runs. Oh yeah, I'm making this reversible. Not my favorite style - it's very easy to mess up a whole line this way - but it does look cool once done. I'm not the best at it, and my backs look a little messy, but I'm doing my best and I hope Kara is eventually pleased with my work. I just hope I can get it to her before her reign ends! Cuffs 9-14-08

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Home | Current Projects - Eternal | Current Projects - Deadlined | Completed in 2007 | Completed in 2006 | Completed in 2005
Completed in 2004 | Completed in 2003 | Completed in 2002 | Pre-2002 | Unknown | Exceptional Stitches | Links |Fair Use