Lotus Flower Coat – Difficulties!

Mix of stitches and threads in white and cream on turquoise tweed

My idea for the stitching on the Lotus Flower Coat is that the petals will be filled with chain and feather stitch variations in a variety of threads and shades. White and cream for inside petals, white and cream with some lilac and pink on the outside petals and the half open flowers. I have plans for the leaves and stems, but we all know how my projects change under my feet!

This – one of the small petal tips that show the inside – shows how this developed in the early stages. I think the tapestry wool is too heavy, so that’s coming out.

Half worked all over, not really working.

Mindful of the difficulties I sometimes have with repetition, I decided to work across the whole open flower at once, and at the point of writing, it had got to this, on the right. And at this point, I rather lost my nerve. I wasn’t sure what was wrong, or why, I was just rather unhappy with it.

A different approach, not lines down, but concentric.

So I decided to try an entirely different approach on one of the half open flowers, to see whether that helped at all.

It has. I don’t like this at all, heavy, clumsy, not at all conveying the sense of enchantment I have from looking at my assorted source materials, or the sense of enchantment Mary Chubb describes in her first encounter with the Lotus Tile Fragment.

Look, I said that Dreams of Amarna had come to a satisfying and coherent conclusion – I never said that it would never guide my needle again!

6 Comments

  1. Sue Jones says:

    It will come right when it’s ready to. It knows a bit of unpicking is good for your patience (and it might learn some interesting words in the process). Is the contrast in the first two colours (and fabric) too strong? Happy pondering.

  2. Work in progress will NEVER look the same as the finished project. It is easy to despair midway through a job.
    In this case, I agree with you that the tapestry wool looks too heavy, but there are other differences, too. It is thicker, it has less shine, more fuzz and more yellow tint than the other threads.

  3. Lin says:

    You will get there in the end!

  4. Jillayne says:

    Oh, I know this feeling – try, try, and try again. I’ve no doubt you’ll get there… perseverance always wins the day!

  5. Alex Hall says:

    I love that Armana is still inspiring you and I have no doubt that it will all work out in the end.

  6. Linda says:

    You have a lot of patience with your projects.

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