Starting the Pansy (Golden Accessories)

Starting the pansy design

To begin with, the Pansy design of the Golden Accessories went much better than I feared.

In some lights the colours of the pansy are much closter than in others, making progress quite slow until I worked out which combination of lighting to use. But the petal shapes are simple enough, and although the weave is fine enough that I keep mistrusting my counting, I am also reminding myself that it doesn’t actually matter too much if the patterning on the petals aren’t exactly as charted. I shan’t be showing people the chart when I show them the pieces, and besides, if they go in the parlour dome, it’s fair to assume any onlookers will be too dazzled to pick up any oddities!

Section of green stitching around the pansy and inside the strapwork now in place

I’ve also learnt from last time.

Last time, I tried to outline the strapwork sections with tacking stitches, so that I could stitch without counting. That didn’t work – I actually misplaced the tacking stitches and had to count anyway. Grrr.

So, this time, I counted out from one point, and then followed the chart to outline, in one row of tent stitch, all the internal edges of the strapwork, and then went back to fill in the gap.

Well, that worked pretty well so it seemed reasonable to assume I could do something similar for the outside.

The Pansy, tent stitch not yet complete, because I was afraid what you see on the card was all I had left. Then I found a whole reel!

Which I could – except, do you see the card with the silk wrapped around it?

When I got to the point I pictured, I had got down to just that bit left, and was contemplating switching to half cross stitch, which has neither coverage nor any real cohesion, in a forlorn attempt not to run out.

Then I looked in the project box and discovered I have an entire reel as yet unstarted!

Phew.

5 Comments

  1. Sue Jones says:

    This is the problem when one makes a chart and “go wrong” – hard to realise that it doesn’t matter as long as the finished result is pleasant. The guilt gets you. Sometimes the “modification” is even an improvement. Nobody gives you extra brownie points for sticking to the original plan.

  2. Lin says:

    Lucky find!

  3. I once stitched three parrots in Cross Stitch and made several counting mistakes in their plumage. No one ever noticed, so why should I be upset about a small miss in colouring.
    You were lucky to find that spare bobbin of floss. Storing, and finding thread is a job in itself!

  4. Linda says:

    Saved by the reel!

  5. Carolyn Foley says:

    How lucky are you to find that thread?