The Stitchery

The cross stitch section of Raspberry World

Sunday, August 28, 2005

WIP: Maibaum

I made some progress on my German maypole piece this week. Here is the first maypole, all complete. Click to see a larger version.

Like a lot of German patterns, this doesn't have any backstitching. It's a kind of primitive/native design, which I enjoy. This piece is half finished now -- there is one more maypole to stitch, and it's the same size as this one. It is easy stitching, and the little symbols on the pole are fun to do.

In case you have never seen a maypole like this, it is quite realistic. Every town throughout southern Germany (and much of Austria) has its own maypole (Maibaum) and all the traditions that go with it. The symbols on the pole historically represented the guilds present in a town.

Different regions' poles look different. Austrian poles are sometimes painted red and white (the colors of Austria). Some poles are simply stripped wood, not painted at all. Sometimes the very top of the tree is left on the pole, so it looks like there is a tiny pine tree sitting way up on top. But in Bavaria, maypoles are usually painted blue and white (the colors of the Bavarian flag). Along the edges of my fabric you'll see the blue and white diamonds of the Bavarian flag.

Click on the picture below to see Munich's maypole, one of the largest and most elaborate in Bavaria:



This piece will be finished as a bow, like the ones in this gallery, with the two maypoles on the long pieces hanging down. I have blue and white satin ribbon to finish it off. Germans love these bows featuring stitched sayings or pictures, and they frequently have different ones to display for different seasons. Ours will go on the wall along with some of our other mementos from when we lived in Bavaria.

Saturday, August 27, 2005

Report: Sudberry House Garage Sale

Boy, this month has flown by. I have been doing some stitching and will have an update with some pictures later this weekend, I hope.

In the meantime, I wanted to write about my visit to the Sudberry House annual garage sale. As you probably know, Sudberry House makes great wooden boxes, trays, and other items to show off needlework. They also have some charts for designs that fit with their wooden items.

Anyway, every year, they have a big sale at their headquarters in Old Lyme, Connecticut. The sale runs from 9 - 1 on each Saturday in August. I went this year on the first Saturday of the month, when they have the biggest crowd -- but also, the biggest selection.

I got there around 9:30 and it was really busy! The street outside Sudberry House was already lined with parked cars on both sides, and their driveway was the same (see picture). What was funny was that their parking lot wasn't full. I guess people saw all the cars outside and decided that the parking lot must already be full -- but it was pretty empty. However, I wouldn't have wanted to drive down the driveway with all the shoppers walking in and out.

Once I made my way back to the buildings (it's in a very pretty wooded area), I saw that they had tables set up outside, piled high with things for sale. They also had more stuff in cardboard boxes set around the edges. The first thing I came to was a row of boxes with a sign saying "Free! Three per person." These boxes were full of little cross stitch kits of Christmas designs, birds, and flowers. I found three I liked, including the state bird and state flower of Georgia, the Brown Thrasher and the Cherokee Rose. Then I moved on to the main event.

The first table I stopped at was covered in trays, both large and small (you can see them stacked up on the nearest table in this picture). There must have been at least a hundred. I picked out two little ones that are very pretty, a tea tray with brass handles and another wooden tray with cut out handles. On the other tables were stacks and stacks of boxes -- recipe boxes, trinket boxes, even music boxes. I picked out several. There were also clocks, key racks, stools, and all kinds of wooden items for showing off needlework.

Some people had brought their finished pieces with them and were picking out wooden items to go with them. Others were simply buying in bulk, snatching up whatever looked good. There was one lady who was buying enough to stock a good-sized shop, but when I asked her, she said it was all for her. She had at least a dozen sampler frames, probably fifty boxes, and a piano bench that could be covered with a big piece of needlework. She assured me that she stocks up every August, and uses up all that stuff during the year. She must be an incredibly fast stitcher.

When I got ready to check out, it was a little confusing at first. Everyone had to stand in a line where workers with adding machines totaled our purchases, and then we went around the corner to pay at a different table. The line for the adding machines was long but it moved very quickly. It probably only took me 15 minutes to check out completely, with waiting in both lines. So even though it was crowded, it wasn't frustrating at all.

The best part was that I got some great bargains. Six boxes, two trays, two key racks, and a candy dish with a glass liner (I already had one of these at home). I think my favorite pieces are the recipe box (which I want to keep for myself), the red painted box (I am going to use it for that red bird I stitched a couple of weeks ago), and the tea trays. I got a bunch of stuff and my total was less than $100. If all those things were full price it probably would have been more like $300! So the trip to the sale was definitely worth it, for me!

Now the garage sale is over for this year, but they'll do it again next August!

Sunday, August 14, 2005

Weekend Update

Here's a little piece I bought in an antique store in Pennsylvania over the weekend:


Click to enlarge.


It is cute and well-stitched. It's a Pennsylvania Dutch hex symbol -- this one is the Distelfink (a goldfinch or "thistle finch") and it is a good-luck sign. The Germans who settled in Pennsylvania painted signs like this to put on their houses and barns. I like these hex signs so I was happy when my husband noticed this one in stack of antique linens. Plus, it was only $2.00! I will have to do something special with it.

While we were traveling, I also did a little stitching:


Click to enlarge.


This is called "Delivering Flurries" and is a design by Homespun Elegance. I am crazy about cardinals and birds in general so when I saw this at my LNS earlier this summer, I snatched it up. It is stitched with Weeks flosses on (I think) Lugana. All the stitching is done now, but it's not finished because I still need to add two buttons for the wheels of the snowman's cart. Also, on the chart, the bird is carrying two ice skate charms in his beak. I don't know if I want to add charms, the buttons may be enough. If I do add a charm, it may not be ice skates. Maybe a basket? I can't decide.

I do have some pictures from the Sudberry House sale last weekend and I still plan to post a report from that. I got a great haul on some of their wooden pieces. I am wondering whether this snowman will work in one of the tea trays I got, or if the buttons will make it too bulky to go under the glass. There's a kind of wooden mat in the tray, under the glass, so it might work. Hmm.

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

WIP: Stiefmütterchen SAL



Here's pansy #4 from Stiefmütterchen by Der Feine Faden. I am now 1/4 finished with the entire piece!

This pansy was not much fun to stitch, as it was mostly white-on-white. The picture's not great, but in person it looks good. I think it looks nicer alongside the other pansies I had already stitched:


Click to enlarge.


Despite not being as much fun to stitch as some of the others, this fourth pansy has cemented my liking for the chart as a whole. I really like how naturalistic the flowers look, how unique each one is. Even seeming imperfections add to the realistic character of the design. There is no backstitching to come, and I really think it looks best that way. I am looking forward to stitching the next pansy -- an orange one that Renee has already stitched on her SAL. (Renee and I are doing the flowers in a different order.)

Now I have to decide whether to put this away until next month (I had one pansy on my goal list for August) or if I want to take it on our weekend trip to Pennsylvania. I will want something easy to stitch while we're traveling, so I may not want to take along the Margaret Sherry piece. I'll have to think about it.

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

Sudberry House Garage Sale

You may be familiar with Sudberry House. This company makes nice wood accessories for showing off needlework. Their boxes, clocks, trays, and other items are probably available in many of your LNSs.

I drive right by the Sudberry House factory and outlet on my way to work every day. It is just off exit 71 on I-95 in Lyme, Connecticut.

Well, this morning I noticed that their Garage Sale banner was out. I had forgotten about the Garage Sale, but it runs every Saturday in August, from 9am to 1pm. The first Saturday is the best day, I've heard, so I am planning to go this weekend.

Are any of you other New England stitchers planning to attend? I will report back on what it's like and what I find.