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Appears to be working now, but all the products on the side are grayed out. Wonder why?
Here for the broderie anglais:
The cat is not as good as many, but the broderie is both possible, and actually quite nice.
Regards,
Richard
Interesting images with prompts trying to see the range of grand houses it can come up with. The architectural type is strongly skewed to the US,
Edwardian lady infront of a grand palladian house with 8 column single storey portico:
One I really liked was this loggia view amongst the porticos. Would have been better with improved left-right symmetry, but not too bad:
Then I looked for a Victorian Gothic. The gingerbread style is more US than UK gothic (seen something similar with a tower etc in a US book of house plans from the Internet Archive), and while it looks nice, structurally, it doesn't make sense even though it could be made with a few steels in the house.
Regards,
Richard.
pretty but that's embroidery
broderie anglais is cut work edged in plain embroidery usually to match the fabric
I seem to have owned many blouses and dresses using the machine produced form, some I sewed myself (the readymade fabric into clothing not embroidered)
Thought it covered the cut & sewn dangly pendant shape too, which is why I accused it of being broderie anglais & stand corrected. It counts as embroidered, but don't think it's a complete definition. The 3d shape of the rose in the middle of the pendant shape isn't white, but don't think 'stumpwork' counts as a definition for it, either. Not something I can do either way, the rather inadequate limit of my embroidery work at the moment is cross stitch, with the picture attached being my first attempt to do a portrait of my wife done in 2014 with 44060 tent stitches on 28 count (0.9mm half crosses) and 118 colours of thread using my own home written thread selection and chart making program.
Regards,
Richard
I cannot stitch to save myself but have a box full of embroidered doilies with crocheted lace edging, actual cutout lacework etc from my late Aunty, Grandmother and great grandmother, more fascinating a box of WW1 embroidered postcards from France from Great Uncle's to my Great Grandmother who both died of their wounds over there.
(actually I only have a few, my brother has the rest)
Nobody knows I have them, just ended up with them and am confused as to who to pass them on to, to be honest
have considered donating them to a war museum display
like here https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/RC00688
Wow. Never knew it was a thing. If they could be displayed somewhere, it'd be great. Ephemera like that quickly gets forgotten.
Regards,
Richard
Good job Richard, Now that's a nice looking house.