Walls and Tussocks

One of the things I find happens very often to me – as regular readers will have noticed! – is that there’s a lot of rethinking that happens.

Picture of part of the Aethelflaed Embroidery, showing  blocks being outlined and the tussocks at the front still missing.

This is partly because rather than being trained to create a design in detail from the start, I have worked it out all very painfully for myself, with different levels of success for each project. And I’ve only been doing it for twenty years. I’m much better than I was, but I am sure that my visual imagination would be much more detailed had I started at the age of sixteen, say!

So, for example, when I first stitched outlines for the blocks, and hadn’t stitched the blocks, it looked very much too dark and out of balance, so I lost confidence, took out the outlines, and worked the blocks without them. Now that Aethelflaed is in place, darker and more emphatic than she might have been, the walls need a little more definition to stand up to her. But not too much, so this time I’m using essentially a mid tone of pinky plum. I think that’s going to work.

Close up of the large tussocks growing near the horse's hindquarters.

I’m also returning to the grass. You may recall that I had a thought as I was doing the early stages of the grass, thinking that it might be a good idea to increase the scale of the tussocks as I came forward. This is one of those elements which is a departure from classical opus anglicanum, as far as I know, but it is a way for me to explore some of the outer reaches of filament silk.

As I’ve said before, I’m not doing a reconstruction, I’m doing a thing which tries to tell a story using a blend of old and new design sensibilities, something that will be definitely a modern piece, but which has echoes.

More tussocks, these in the bottom left corner.

How well this will work when all four of the Medieval Movers And Shakers are done and displayed together, I don’t know.

How well I will balance old style and new style, images, stories and echoes, I don’t know.

But it’s going to be fun finding out!

1 Comment

  1. Sue Jones says:

    I really like the tussocky bits, they make it all hold together. Plus they give the horse something to nibble on while the boss is consulting with builders and architects. Nobody wants a bored and hungry steed.

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