Another experiment in Trapunto..

Remember this?

I wanted to have a go at creating some Anglo Saxon jewels as a possible ornament for however I end up displaying Aethelflaed. It was enough of a success that I felt that, with some fiddling around, I might be able to produce something suitable. And since this one was very much thrown together from things I had to hand, there’s a lot of fiddling around to do!

And here you see some of it. I went looking for materials, this time, and thought it through a bit more.

So, crimson gauze laid over gold tissue, laid in turn over calico for support. The gold tissue may be a good idea for the effect in real life, but it is a complete nightmare to photograph, and I apologise in advance for the peculiar changes of colour the fabric will undergo!

I used back stitch in a single strand, rather than split stitch in two, but took more or less the same approach to the outer channels, filling them with woollen thread. I was a little inconsistent in how I did so, which is why you see little bits of wool above the gauze – something I didn’t want, but struggled not to do. There must be a trick to trapunto quilting without going permanently demented, but I’m not sure I have it yet!

I should probably also apologise for my photography..

Anyway, the next bit was why I wanted to include the gold tissue in my sandwich of fabrics. If you look at the Sutton Hoo helmet and some other Anglo Saxon items, you will see that in some cases the gems look lighter than others, and it has been determined that that is because they’ve been backed with gold foil. I’m trying to get the same effect here, but in the case of fabric by inserting the filling behind the gold tissue.

This was very nearly as unnerving a proceeding as when I was doing much the same thing at the beginning of Akhenaten. You’d think I would have learnt sense by now, wouldn’t you!

4 Comments

  1. Sue Jones says:

    It looks fiddly, and I applaud you ambitions for it. Knowing my own adventures with metallic fabric (now lost in the mists of time), I can imagine at least some of the screams and curses!

  2. Carolyn Foley says:

    I am always surprised by what I learn when doing something I think I know!

  3. Alex Hall says:

    The British Museum have a fascinating online article about Anglo Saxon garnets from Sutton Hoo and the Staffordshire Hoard at http://tinyurl.com/websterhoo. Your experiment definitely has the same sort of feel, so you’re definitely going in the right direction.

  4. Queeniepatch says:

    I find Trapunto is a bit challenging, as I have difficulty in keeping the channels exactly the same widths.
    Metallic fabric must be seen by the naked eye. Camera lenses can hardly ever catch the right look. I like your choice of colour.