The Needlepoint Canvas

Needlepoint Crafts by the Needlepoint Queen!

Archive for August, 2008

Aug
30

Needlepoint Crafts In The News: August 30, 2008

Posted under needlepoint crafts

Welcome back to The Needlepoint Canvas!

Be sure to see the Christmas Needlepoint page with the holiday projects we have available. Thank you for visiting.


Aug. 30 and 31

South Haven hosts All Crafts Fair
HollandSentinel.com - Holland,MI,USA
… the variety of products will include simple country crafts, paintings, sculptures, pottery, needlepoint, woodcrafts, candles, jewelry and more.

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Aug
29

Needlepoint Crafts In The News: August 29, 2008

Posted under needlepoint crafts, needlepoint kits, needlepoint patterns, needlepoint pillows, needlepoint stitch

DCP_0065 Needlepoint Crafts In The News: August 29, 2008 title needlepoint crafts
News-antique.com (press release)

 Needlepoint Crafts In The News: August 29, 2008 title needlepoint crafts
Asselmeier & May Antique Estate Auction (Sept. 6)
News-antique.com (press release), NY
Stand Tables, Walnut Corner What Not Shelf, Walnut Half Commode With Drawer & Door Below, Fancy Victorian Parlor Chairs Including With Needlepoint,


Barack the Vote: Obama’s Audacious Acceptance Speech
Washingtonian.com, DC - 11 hours ago
The program stretched long enough in the hot Colorado sun that, in the row in front of me, one woman did needlepoint, a man read a poll briefing,


Local company expands market internationally
Barnstable Patriot, MA
Their new residential franchise office will be located at 846A Main St., Osterville, currently Christine’s Needlepoint, where ample window space along the
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Aug
28

Needlepoint Crafts In The News: August 28, 2008

Posted under needlepoint Christmas, needlepoint crafts, needlepoint kits, needlepoint patterns, needlepoint pillows, needlepoint stitch
 Needlepoint Crafts In The News: August 28, 2008 title needlepoint crafts
Lacy detail adds elegance
Calgary Herald, Canada
For a free copy of this pattern, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to: Needlepoint Pattern No. 1761, c/o Neighbours, Calgary Herald, PO Box 2699,

Arts and Crafts
Washington Post, United States
Instruction in cross-stitch, crochet, knitting and needlepoint. $2 drop-in fee. Register. 540-822-5284. STERLING RURITAN CLUB– 7 pm Thursdays,
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Aug
18

Needlepoint In The News

Posted under needlepoint canvas, needlepoint crafts, needlepoint cushion, needlepoint pillows, needlepoint stitch

Aug. 30 and 31

South Haven hosts All Crafts Fair
HollandSentinel.com - Holland,MI,USA
… the variety of products will include simple country crafts, paintings, sculptures, pottery, needlepoint, woodcrafts, candles, jewelry and more.


August 27, 2008

Calhoun artist uses watercolors to depict life’s happy moments
Monroe News Star - Monroe,LA,USA
“I had never really drawn or anything; I did a lot of needlepoint, and I like decorating, those kinds of things,” Rey-Taylor said.


August 26, 2008

ON THE TOWN: Deals abound at August Christmas
Glendale News Press - Glendale,CA,USA
Evelyn Rondino, whom locals know as the funny waitress at Billy’s Deli, bought a needlepoint kit. “I love this place, I love these people,” Rondino enthused


Takes place on 8/27/2008

Alderfer Auction Company
Antiques and the Arts Online - Newtown,CT,USA
fall front desk; walnut sideboard; vintage mahogany furnishings; 3 drawer Chippendale style bachelors chest; Victorian - needlepoint side chairs,


at Cyr Auction Gallery Wednesday August 27th 2008 - 5:00 pm
Antiques and the Arts Online - Newtown,CT,USA
Needlepoint Chairs; Painted And Lacquer Screens; Onyx Stand; Vic. Parlor Tables; Gilt Mirrors; Large Gothic Bench; Vic. Hall Mirror; Oval Walnut Lamp Table;


August 25, 2008

Creativity at Its best at the 152nd Mid-South Fair
Jackson Sun - Jackson,TN,USA
Other Creative Arts categories include: culinary contests and demonstrations, painting, quilting, weaving, knitting and needlepoint, ceramics, calligraphy,

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Aug
10

Still sharp as a needle (point)…

Posted under inspiring, needlepoint canvas

If you’re still with me after the pun, today I think we’ll divert a little from the tips and updates to show everyone this piece I came across yesterday. It’s not often that I find something in the media about needlework so when I stumble upon something, I try to share it with my readers so you can get a kick out of it just like I do. I must admit that I can only hope to match Mary’s technique when I’m her age. Even now I sometimes feel like my eyes and fingers could give out on me at any moment! I wish the pictures from the article were a bit clearer so we could see some of the detail she put into her work, but judging from the close up of her hoop and the stitch count she’s working with, I would say this is undoubtedly impressive. Anyhow, next post I promise we’ll be back with some more patterns and ideas, but for today, enjoy the story and feel free to comment.


Bloomington woman handles needlepoint with grace

BLOOMINGTON — Mary Roper was just 3 when she first tried to mimic her mother’s crochet skills using a piece of string she’d tie into knots.mary1-300x291 Still sharp as a needle (point)... title needlepoint crafts

She mastered it quickly, a sign of things to come.

As a child and young woman, Roper was enamored with sewing, crocheting and knitting anything and everything she could find. First doll clothes, then her own.

“I’ve done handiwork all my life,” she said. The fascination never ended and, with each pull, the thread slowly drew out an artist.

Today, just two years shy of 90, the great-grandmother continues her passion.

Her split-level home in Bloomington is overflowing with displays of her medium of choice, needlepoint, and its more complicated sister, petit point.

Working on the craft requires patience and creativity, a sharp eye, and careful finger work with a half-inch-long thin needle.

She starts her work in the middle of a canvas to make sure it’s centered. “I like to see it unfold. I say ‘Oh, here it comes,’ as the image develops,” she said of her detailed works.

angels1-300x291 Still sharp as a needle (point)... title needlepoint craftsOne July morning, Roper visited in her living room with her daughter, Nancy Reed of Bloomington. Sitting in her armchair, she worked on a knitting project to pass the time.

When she gets serious, the medium she chooses is petit point.

“I like the challenge of it,” said Roper. Petit point (pronounced ‘pedipoint’) refers to needlepoint that goes beyond the standard stitches-per-inch counts. “I think an 18-count is on the border,” she said. Roper doesn’t use painted canvas, though she recommends those for beginners. Rather, she refers to charted books.

Using a textile canvas, a complicated spread of tiny fibers in various shades, a wooden hoop, and tapestry needle, she weaves her pieces. Currently, she’s working on a replica of the painting “Bouquet of Flowers” by Joseph Nigg. She turns on a powerful lamp stretched directly over her work and armchair, and then refers to a complicated book charting each color, and blends color. This pattern uses 32 stitches to the inch.

Roper came across petit point in the 1980s while living in the Quad Cities. She’d already beenRoper pulls a threaded needle through a current petit point project. (The Pantagraph/STEVE SMEDLEY) needlepointing 20 years. On her first project, in the early 1960s, her husband painted a dining room table and she needlepointed a design on the chairs to match. “We did a lot of work together,” she said, pointing to some needlepoints on the walls based on his drawings.

Mary Lynn Mullins, who owns the Yarn Garden in Bloomington, met Roper about 10 years ago, and has been in awe since.

“My friend said, ‘You won’t believe her needlepoint.’ Now, I thought of myself as pretty good at needlepoint. But when I saw Mary’s work, it was something,” said Mullins.

Most people who needlepoint stitch about 14 points per inch, she said. “But Mary does 30-, 32-, 36-count,” said her friend.

And it isn’t just the pack she punches into each inch that’s impressive.

“Her stitches are done perfectly. There’s no separation of fibers.”

Mullins describes an impressive use of silk thread, and Roper’s tendency to separate a 12-ply fiber and blend colors to make a new one. “She can almost paint the canvas. It looks like an oil painting,” said Mullins, who last month hosted an exhibit of Roper’s works at her store in the CII East Building.

“It must have taken her a week to put everything up here. And it only was supposed to be up one week, but through word of mouth everyone wanted to come see it so we held it week after week. It actually was there four weeks,” said Mullins.

The display honored Roper’s 88th birthday on June 14.

Colored threads sit in small plastic file drawers awaiting a petit point project by Mary Roper. (The Pantagraph/STEVE SMEDLEY)

Colored threads sit in small plastic file drawers awaiting a petit point project by Mary Roper. (The Pantagraph/STEVE SMEDLEY)

Back home, and in their proper places, the framed works hang on every wall between paintings created by her late husband. Her bedroom alone has about 80 separate 10- by 14-inch pieces, each depicting an angel. And around every hallway corner is a stool, chair, or pillow needle-pointed into a design. Hanging in the closets are fashionable sweaters she’s knitted, and on the beds are beautiful quilts she’s crafted.

One room is devoted to her thread passion. A cabinet full of tiny drawers contains fibers for her craft. And, of course, the walls are full of her petit points.

Now retired and a widow, Roper almost always is doing some form of handiwork, or sometimes a crossword puzzle, to keep busy. But she admits, even when hers was the hectic life of a minister’s wife and working mother of five, she tried to do needlepoint as often as she could. These days, when she does go out, it’s often to Village Stitches or The Yarn Garden, local shops catering to the needle arts. She also likes to meet with informal knitting groups at the shops, socializing while working.

Reprinted with permission from The Pantagraph

By Michele Steinbacher
msteinbacher@pantagraph.com

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Aug
09

What is needlepoint to you?

Posted under inspiring, needlepoint canvas, needlepoint stitch

The best part for me is that it has the ability to provide many hours of creative pleasure. I love to get into the rhythm of the process. I can slow my pace from a busy day, relax and breathe. Working on a needlepoint project gives me the sense that I’m being artistic and inventive, even if I’m just following a pattern. I can watch something unfold and take pride in my productivity. It is all a very fun and satisfying craft.

I would really like to hear from all of you. Take a moment and share your thoughts or feelings on what you enjoy most? Click Add Comments below and let us all know what needlepoint means to you.

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Aug
08

The history of needlepoint and needlepoint canvas…

Posted under needlepoint canvas, needlepoint history

I recently came across this interesting article about the history of needlework and needlepoint evolving in style and materials used throughout the ages.

It is interesting to see how needlepoint has branched into the several forms we have today. The history and changes that shaped the craft are amazing. Please enjoy and get informed by this fun article written by Jo Kefford .

http://EzineArticles.com/?Needlepoint-Through-The-Ages&id=127858

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