Starting, at last, on the Lotus Flower Coat

Pile of folded pattern pieces on a varnished table, pattern envelope on top.

You might recall that a gorgeous piece of turquoise tweed came my way and provoked thoughts of a jacket or coat decorated with lotus flowers. So, not part of the “Dreams of Amarna”, but once you have an interest in something, or an attachment to a design style, it never really lets go!

Paper cutouts laid on the back piece of the jacket.

And I didn’t find myself a Twixmas project, so rather than having a small pause, I’m moving straight on. It will be worked in the hand, so it fits the challenge of not needing the place the Christmas Tree lives, and to be honest, I’ve not been finding the last few months stressful in embroidery terms (in others, yes!) and I don’t feel I need a reboot. So, onward!

Anyone who attended the ThreadTalk I did for the Embroiderers Guild, or who was reading my planning for Stella’s Birds will be familiar with my paper cutouts by now! You can see that this isn’t quite right. It looks a bit too abrupt, the spaces are maybe in the wrong places.

Final design layout: one open flower and two half open

This is altogether better. It’s not so abrupt, it’s paying heed to the botanical form while keeping to the stylised appearance of the original ancient Egyptian inspiration.

My intention is that the shapes will be filled with rows and rows of line stitches, chain stitch and feather stitch variations mainly, and at the moment I am planning to leave a line of untouched fabric showing around each of the elements. Once I have the thing finished, I can decide whether to fill in the gaps!

I’ll be using a mix of threads, too, wool, silk, cotton, some plain, some variegated.

4 Comments

  1. Lin says:

    A lovely new project to be working on over the Christmas break.

  2. Carolyn Foley says:

    What a great design. Can’t wait to see how it progresses.

  3. Queeniepatch says:

    It’s a lovely colour tweed where the lotus flowers will grow happily. I am looking forward to your choice of stitches.

  4. Alex Hall says:

    Oooh, lovely. And I love the almost faience colour of the fabric to keep the Egyptian vibe going.