Embroideryis the art of decoratingfabricor other materials using aneedleto stitchthread or yarn.Embroidery may also incorporate other materials such aspearls,beads,quills,andsequins.In modern days, embroidery is usually seen on hats, clothing, blankets, and handbags. Embroidery is available in a wide variety ofthread or yarncolour. It is often used to personalize gifts or clothing items.
Some of the basic techniques orstitchesof the earliest embroidery arechain stitch,buttonhole or blanket stitch,running stitch,satin stitch,andcross stitch.[1]Those stitches remain the fundamental techniques of hand embroidery today.
History
editOrigins
editThe process used to tailor, patch, mend and reinforce cloth fostered the development of sewing techniques, and the decorative possibilities of sewing led to the art of embroidery.[2]Indeed, the remarkable stability of basic embroidery stitches has been noted:
It is a striking fact that in the development of embroidery... there are no changes of materials or techniques which can be felt or interpreted as advances from a primitive to a later, more refined stage. On the other hand, we often find in early works a technical accomplishment and high standard of craftsmanship rarely attained in later times.[3]
The art of embroidery has been found worldwide and several early examples have been found. Works in China have been dated to theWarring States period(5th–3rd century BC).[4]In a garment fromMigration periodSweden, roughly 300–700 AD, the edges of bands of trimming are reinforced with running stitch, back stitch, stem stitch, tailor's buttonhole stitch, and Whip stitch, but it is uncertain whether this work simply reinforced the seams or should be interpreted as decorative embroidery.[5]
Historical applications and techniques
editDepending on time, location and materials available, embroidery could be the domain of a few experts or a widespread, popular technique. This flexibility led to a variety of works, from the royal to the mundane. Examples of high status items include elaborately embroidered clothing, religious objects, and household items often were seen as a mark of wealth and status.
In medieval England,Opus Anglicanum,a technique used by professional workshops and guilds in medievalEngland,[6]was used to embellish textiles used in church rituals. In 16th century England, some books, usually bibles or other religious texts, had embroidered bindings. TheBodleian LibraryinOxfordcontains one presented toQueen Elizabeth Iin 1583. It also owns a copy of The Epistles of Saint Paul, whose cover was reputedly embroidered by the Queen.[7]
In 18th-century England and its colonies, with the rise of the merchant class and the wider availability of luxury materials, rich embroideries began to appear in a secular context. These embroideries took the form of items displayed in private homes of well-to-do citizens, as opposed to a church or royal setting. Even so, the embroideries themselves may still have had religious themes. Samplers employing fine silks were produced by the daughters of wealthy families. Embroidery was a skill marking a girl's path into womanhood as well as conveying rank and social standing.[8]
Embroidery was an important art and signified social status in the Medieval Islamic world as well. The 17th-centuryTurkishtravelerEvliya Çelebicalled it the "craft of the two hands". In cities such asDamascus,CairoandIstanbul,embroidery was visible onhandkerchiefs,uniforms, flags,calligraphy,shoes,robes,tunics, horse trappings, slippers, sheaths, pouches, covers, and even onleatherbelts.Craftsmen embroidered items withgoldandsilverthread. Embroidery cottage industries, some employing over 800 people, grew to supply these items.[9]
In the 16th century, in the reign of theMughal EmperorAkbar,his chroniclerAbu al-Fazl ibn Mubarakwrote in the famousAin-i-Akbari:
"His majesty [Akbar] pays much attention to various stuffs; henceIrani,Ottoman,andMongolianarticles of wear are in much abundance especially textiles embroidered in the patterns ofNakshi,Saadi,Chikhan,Ari,Zardozi,Wastli,GotaandKohra.The imperial workshops in the towns ofLahore,Agra,FatehpurandAhmedabadturn out many masterpieces of workmanship in fabrics, and the figures and patterns, knots and variety of fashions which now prevail astonish even the most experienced travelers. Taste for fine material has since become general, and the drapery of embroidered fabrics used at feasts surpasses every description. "[10]
Conversely, embroidery is also afolk art,using materials that were accessible to nonprofessionals. Examples includeHardanger embroideryfrom Norway;MerezhkafromUkraine;Mountmellick embroideryfrom Ireland;Nakshi kanthafromBangladeshandWest Bengal;AchachifromPeru;andBrazilian embroidery.Many techniques had a practical use such asSashikofromJapan,which was used as a way to reinforce clothing.[11][12]
While historically viewed as a pastime, activity, or hobby, intended just for women, embroidery has often been used as a form of biography. Women who were unable to access a formal education or, at times, writing implements, were often taught embroidery and utilized it as a means of documenting their lives by telling stories through their embroidery.[13]In terms of documenting the histories of marginalized groups, especially women of color both within the United States and around the world, embroidery is a means of studying the everyday lives of those whose lives largely went unstudied throughout much of history.[14]
21st century
editSince the late 2010s, there has been a growth in the popularity of embroidering by hand. As a result of visual social media such asPinterestandInstagram,artists are able to share their work more extensively, which has inspired younger generations to pick up needle and threads.[citation needed]
Contemporary embroidery artists believe hand embroidery has grown in popularity as a result of an increasing need for relaxation and digitally disconnecting practices.[15]
Modern hand embroidery, as opposed tocross-stitching,is characterized by a more "liberal" approach, where stitches are more freely combined in unconventional ways to create various textures and designs.[citation needed]
Modern canvas work tends to follow symmetrical counted stitching patterns with designs emerging from the repetition of one or just a few similar stitches in a variety of hues. In contrast, many forms of surface embroidery make use of a wide range of stitching patterns in a single piece of work.[16]
Climate crisis
editTraining women in traditional embroidery skills inInner Mongolia,was begun byBai Jingyingas a reaction to the financial pressures caused by the impact of climate change, includingdesertification,in the region.[17]
Classification
editEmbroidery can be classified according to what degree the design takes into account the nature of the base material and by the relationship of stitch placement to the fabric. The main categories are free orsurface embroidery,counted-thread embroidery,and needlepoint or canvas work.[18]
In free or surface embroidery, designs are applied without regard to the weave of the underlying fabric. Examples includecreweland traditional Chinese and Japanese embroidery.
Counted-thread embroiderypatternsare created by making stitches over a predetermined number of threads in the foundation fabric. Counted-thread embroidery is more easily worked on aneven-weavefoundation fabric such as embroiderycanvas,aida cloth,or specially wovencottonandlinenfabrics. Examples includecross-stitchand some forms ofblackwork embroidery.
While similar to counted thread in regards to technique, incanvas workorneedlepoint,threads are stitched through a fabric mesh to create a dense pattern that completely covers the foundation fabric.[19]Examples of canvas work includebargelloandBerlin wool work.
Embroidery can also be classified by the similarity of its appearance. Indrawn thread workandcutwork,the foundation fabric is deformed or cut away to create holes that are then embellished with embroidery, often with thread in the same color as the foundation fabric. When created with white thread on white linen or cotton, this work is collectively referred to aswhitework.[20]However, whitework can either be counted or free.Hardanger embroideryis a counted embroidery and the designs are often geometric.[21]Conversely, styles such asBroderie anglaiseare similar to free embroidery, with floral or abstract designs that are not dependent on the weave of the fabric.[22]
Traditional hand embroidery around the world
editMaterials and tools
editMaterials
editThe fabrics and yarns used in traditional embroidery vary from place to place.Wool,linen,andsilkhave been in use for thousands of years for both fabric andyarn.Today,embroidery threadis manufactured incotton,rayon,andnovelty yarnsas well as in traditional wool, linen, and silk.Ribbonembroidery uses narrow ribbon in silk or silk/organzablend ribbon, most commonly to create floral motifs.[30]
Surface embroidery techniques such aschain stitchandcouchingor laid-work are the most economical of expensive yarns; couching is generally used forgoldwork.Canvas work techniques, in which large amounts of yarn are buried on the back of the work, use more materials but provide a sturdier and more substantial finished textile.[31]
Tools
editA needle is the main stitching tool in embroidery, and comes in various sizes and types.[32]
In both canvas work and surface embroidery anembroidery hoopor frame can be used to stretch the material and ensure even stitching tension that prevents pattern distortion.[33]
Machine embroidery
editThe development of machine embroidery and itsmass productioncame about in stages during theIndustrial Revolution.The first embroidery machine was thehand embroidery machine,invented in France in 1832 by Josué Heilmann.[34]The next evolutionary step was theschiffli embroidery machine.The latter borrowed from the sewing machine and theJacquard loomto fully automate its operation. The manufacture ofmachine-made embroideriesinSt. Gallenin eastern Switzerland flourished in the latter half of the 19th century.[35]Both St. Gallen, Switzerland andPlauen, Germanywere important centers for machine embroidery and embroidery machine development. Many Swiss and Germans immigrated toHudson county, New Jerseyin the early twentieth century and developed a machine embroidery industry there. Shiffli machines have continued to evolve and are still used for industrial scale embroidery.[36]
Contemporary embroidery is stitched with acomputerizedembroidery machine using patterns digitized withembroidery software.Inmachine embroidery,different types of "fills" add texture and design to the finished work.Machine embroideryis used to addlogosandmonogramsto business shirts or jackets, gifts, and team apparel as well as to decorate household items for the bed and bath and other linens, draperies, and decorator fabrics that mimic the elaborate hand embroidery of the past.
Machine embroidery is most typically done withrayon thread,althoughpolyester threadcan also be used.Cottonthread, on the other hand, is prone to breaking and is avoided.[37]
There has also been a development in free hand machine embroidery, new machines have been designed that allow for the user to create free-motion embroidery which has its place in textile arts, quilting, dressmaking, home furnishings and more. Users can use the embroidery software to digitize the digital embroidery designs. These digitized design are then transferred to the embroidery machine with the help of a flash drive and then the embroidery machine embroiders the selected design onto the fabric.
In literature
editInGreek mythologythe goddessAthenais said to have passed down the art of embroidery (along withweaving) to humans, leading to the famed competition between herself and the mortalArachne.[38]
Gallery
edit-
Traditional embroidery in chain stitch on aKazakhrug, contemporary.
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Caucasianembroidery
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Englishcope,late 15th or early 16th century. Silk velvet embroidered with silk and gold threads, closely laid and couched. ContemporaryArt Institute of Chicagotextile collection.
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Extremely fine underlay ofSt. Gallen Embroidery
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Traditional Turkish embroidery. Izmir Ethnography Museum, Turkey.
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Traditional Croatian embroidery.
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Gold embroidery on agognots(apron) of a 19th-centuryArmenianbridal dress fromAkhaltsikhe
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Brightly coloured Korean embroidery.
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Uzbekistan embroidery on a traditional women'sparandjarobe.
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Woman wearing a traditional embroidered Kalash headdress, Pakistan.
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Bookmark of black fabric with multicoloredBedouinembroidery and tassel of embroidery floss
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Chain-stitch embroidery from Englandc. 1775
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Traditional Bulgarian Floral embroidery from Sofia and Trun.
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A 1919 painting depicting theBrazilian flagbeing embroidered by a family.
See also
editNotes
editCitations
edit- ^"Top 12 Basic Hand Embroidery Stitches".Sarah's Hand Embroidery Tutorials.Retrieved2020-05-06.
- ^Gillow & Sentance 1999,p. 12.
- ^Marie Schuette and Sigrid Muller-Christensen,The Art of Embroiderytranslated by Donald King, Thames and Hudson, 1964, quoted inNetherton & Owen-Crocker 2005,p. 2.
- ^Gillow & Sentance 1999,p. 178.
- ^Coatsworth, Elizabeth: "Stitches in Time: Establishing a History of Anglo-Saxon Embroidery", inNetherton & Owen-Crocker 2005,p. 2.
- ^Levey & King 1993,p. 12.
- ^Harriet Bridgeman; Elizabeth Drury (1978).Needlework: an illustrated history.New York: Paddington Press. p. 42.ISBN0-448-22066-0.OCLC3843144.
- ^Power, Lisa (27 March 2015)."NGV embroidery exhibition: imagine a 12-year-old spending two years on this..."The Sydney Morning Herald.Retrieved30 May2015.
- ^Stone, Caroline (May–June 2007)."The Skill of the Two Hands".Saudi Aramco World.Vol. 58, no. 3. Archived fromthe originalon 2014-10-13.Retrieved2011-01-21.
- ^Werner, Louis (July–August 2011)."Mughal Maal".Saudi Aramco World.Vol. 62, no. 4.Archivedfrom the original on 2016-02-22.Retrieved2011-08-11.
- ^"Handa City Sashiko Program at the Society for Contemporary Craft".Japan-America Society of Pennsylvania.7 Oct 2016.Archivedfrom the original on 5 July 2017.Retrieved25 January2018.
- ^Siddle, Kat."Sashiko".Seamwork Magazine.Colette Media, LLC.Retrieved2018-01-26.
- ^Murphy, A. Mary (July 2003). "The Theory and Practice of Counting Stitches as Stories: Material Evidences of Autobiography in Needlework".Women's Studies.32(5): 641–655.doi:10.1080/00497870390207149.S2CID143527585.
- ^van der Merwe, Ria (November 2017). "From a silent past to a spoken future. Black women's voices in the archival process".Archives and Records.40(3): 239–258.doi:10.1080/23257962.2017.1388224.hdl:2263/72551.S2CID220316392.
- ^Elin (2019-06-11)."History of embroidery and its rise in popularity".Charles and Elin.Archived fromthe originalon 2019-07-25.Retrieved2019-07-25.
- ^Reader's Digest 1979,pp. 1–19, 112–117.
- ^"Community threads together".chinadailyhk.Retrieved2024-07-14.
- ^Corbet, Mary (October 3, 2016)."Needlework Terminology: Surface Embroidery".RetrievedNovember 1,2016.
- ^Gillow & Sentance 1999,p. 198.
- ^Reader's Digest 1979,pp. 74–91.
- ^Yvette Stanton (30 March 2016).Early Style Hardanger.Vetty Creations.ISBN978-0-9757677-7-1.
- ^Catherine Amoroso Leslie (1 January 2007).Needlework Through History: An Encyclopedia.Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 34, 226, 58.ISBN978-0-313-33548-8.Retrieved13 September2013.
- ^"The History and Technique of Candlewicking and Whitework".Needlepointers.2020-10-27.Retrieved2022-04-16.
- ^"Technique - Opus Anglicanum".medieval.webcon.net.au.Retrieved2022-04-16.
- ^ab"Technique - Opus Teutonicum".medieval.webcon.net.au.Retrieved2022-04-16.
- ^abK, Roman (2012-08-07)."FolkCostume&Embroidery: Rushnyk embroidery of southern East Podillia".FolkCostume&Embroidery.Retrieved2022-04-16.
- ^K, Roman (2014-07-01)."FolkCostume&Embroidery: Ukrainian Rose Embroidery".FolkCostume&Embroidery.Retrieved2022-04-16.
- ^Ollman, Leah (October 25, 2017)."Quiet power of embroidery hits eloquently".The Los Angeles Times.p. E3.
- ^"UNESCO - Zmijanje embroidery".ich.unesco.org.Retrieved2022-04-16.
- ^van Niekerk 2006.
- ^Reader's Digest 1979,pp. 112–115.
- ^"Needles".Sarah's Hand Embroidery Tutorials.Retrieved2020-05-06.
- ^"Materials Required for Hand Embroidery".Sarah's Hand Embroidery Tutorials.Retrieved2020-05-06.
- ^Willem."Hand Embroidery Machine".trc-leiden.nl.Retrieved2019-02-19.
- ^Röllin, Peter.Stickerei-Zeit, Kultur und Kunst in St. Gallen 1870–1930.VGS Verlagsgemeinschaft, St. Gallen 1989,ISBN3-7291-1052-7(in German)
- ^Schneider, Coleman (1968).Machine Made Embroideries.Globe Lithographing Company.
- ^"Choosing Machine-Embroidery Threads".Threads Magazine.The Taunton Press, Inc. 2008-11-02.Retrieved2018-11-27.
- ^Synge, Lanto (2001).Art of Embroidery: History of Style and Technique.Woodbridge, England: Antique Collectors' Club. p. 32.ISBN9781851493593.
Bibliography
edit- Gillow, John; Sentance, Bryan (1999).World Textiles.Bulfinch Press/Little, Brown.ISBN0-8212-2621-5.
- Levey, S. M.; King, D. (1993).The Victoria and Albert Museum's Textile Collection Vol. 3: Embroidery in Britain from 1200 to 1750.Victoria and Albert Museum.ISBN1-85177-126-3.
- Netherton, Robin;Owen-Crocker, Gale R.,eds. (2005).Medieval Clothing and Textiles, Volume 1.Boydell Press.ISBN1-84383-123-6.
- Complete Guide to Needlework.Reader's Digest. 1979.ISBN0-89577-059-8.
- van Niekerk, Di (2006).A Perfect World in Ribbon Embroidery and Stumpwork.Search Press.ISBN1-84448-231-6.
Further reading
edit- Berman, Pat (2000)."Berlin Work".American Needlepoint Guild.Archived fromthe originalon 2009-02-06.Retrieved2009-01-24.
- Caulfeild, S.F.A.; B.C. Saward (1885).The Dictionary of Needlework.
- Crummy, Andrew (2010).The Prestonpans Tapestry 1745.Burke's Peerage & Gentry, forBattle of Prestonpans(1745) Heritage Trust.
- Embroiderers' Guild Practical Study Group (1984).Needlework School.QED Publishers.ISBN0-89009-785-2.
- Koll, Juby Aleyas (2019).Sarah's Hand Embroidery Tutorials.
- Lemon, Jane (2004).Metal Thread Embroidery.Sterling.ISBN0-7134-8926-X.
- Vogelsang, Gillian; Vogelsang, Willem, eds. (2015).TRC Needles. The TRC Digital Encyclopaedia of Decorative Needlework.Leiden, The Netherlands: Textile Research Centre.
- Wilson, David M. (1985).The Bayeux Tapestry.Thames and Hudson.ISBN0-500-25122-3.
External links
edit- Media related toEmbroideryat Wikimedia Commons
- The History ofEmbroidery