The
society of the golden egg is a challenge household for the arts and
sciences in the Kingdom of Drachenwald, within the Society for
Creative Anachronism. The aim of the Society of the Golden Egg is to
encourage artisans to increase their knowledge and skills through
continuous challenges of at least intermediate difficulty, but which
are a personal challenge to the person seeking to join the society.
Challengers normally have up to one year to complete their challenge.
Im going to recreate a german 16th century embroidery, a
headgeardecoration from 1510-15. To read more about my challenge look here.
Portrait of a woman by Bernhard Strigel 1510-15 |
Embroidered
pieces of this kind where used during the first half of the 16th
century in Germany, before other types of headgear went into fashion.
For my golden egg challenge I have been looking for a similar pattern
as my chosen embroidery but whas not sure I was going to find one.
Geometrical
patterns (late Gotic) was common during the first part of the 16th
century to be replaced by softer more natural forms (early
Renaissance). Flowers
where common motifs, and especially the eight petaled flowers as in
my chosen embroidery. The patternbooks are full of exampels of this
kind. They can be made as wowen bands, or with different kind of
stitching, like blackstitch, whitework or satin stitch. My guess is
that the embroidery in the painting is more towards the late gotic
with its heavily decorated surface and almost geometrical repeated
pattern, than early renaissance.
In
the introduction of the reprint from 1994 of the New
Modelbüch
from 1568 the eight petaled flower is called the Venedigische stern,
Venetian star. Probably for beeing prevalent in textiles and carpets
imported into Europe during the timeperiod, from the Mediterranean.
All
of these patterns above is examples of the Venetian star from the
patternbook New Modelbüch from 1568. As
you can see there are a lot of patterns like this but not one looking
exact like the one in my chosen painting.
And then I ran into a hand
drawn pattern book from 1759 from Augsburg in Germany, the
Modelbuch by Johann Tobias Frolich and Marcus Luz. It contains a
large number of patterns from the 16th century printed books. And
there it was! My pattern...sort of...It has big similarities with my
painting and can be found on page 46:
The
book belong to the Clark Art Institute and it is scanned and able to look at here.
But
as not beeing exactly the same I needed to remake it and try my
remake out, My first tryouts did not work. My linen was to uneven.
But with a more even weave it worked out just fine. I worked with
double running stitch, black silk thread and every stitch is 4 threads in the fabric.
I
started with remaking the pattern, from what I thought lookt like a
pattern for cross stitch, into a pattern with one outline and more
fitting for doubble running stitch, the stitch I think a big part of
the embroidery are made with. Because of the thin black outlines of
the flowers.
And the next step – making it more like a flower or a star and reduce and tilt the squares a bit.
To make the pattern looking even more like the one in the painting I tried to make the flower slimmer. I notised that by doing so I could no longer count the stitches, it became uneven. And my guess is that it is going to be difficult to make the satin stitch look good in the next step. But it look like this.
Here is the pattern together with the embroidery from the painting and my remade pattern. Looking quite good, right! To make it more like the painting I might need to make the petales slimmer. And also try stitches for the braid-looking-part in between the flowers and the squares. I think the red and green parts are made with satin stitch but I need to order some silk and try it out! Cant wait!
During
the process following questions arose:
Do
I need to make the flowers slimmer to match the painting? If I do its going to be difficult to make it a counted running stitch and all the flowers is going to be a struggle with colouring later.
It
looks like Bernhard Strigel used the colour from the lindenboard for
the flowers. Did the colour disapeared during time or has is always
been so? And what colours should I use then, for my embroidery? Is
the quest to make an embroidery looking exaclty like the one in the
picture? Even if I, during the process, founds out that the painter
must have used some artistic freedom with the embroidery?
Modelbücher
The word modelbüch means ”pattern book” in german. Johannes Schönsperger the younger printed the earliest, surviving, publication in Augsburg, Germany, Furm oder modelbüchlein, in 1524 and was soon followed by others in Italy, France and England. During the first half of the 16th century, Augsburg was the main site for publishing pattern books in Germany. The oldest editions are made as woodcuts. Several editions were printed and older designs were often present when new authors published new pattern books. None of the volumes contains written directions or diagram for executing stitches. This tells us quite much about the reader´s technical skills.
Modelbücher
The word modelbüch means ”pattern book” in german. Johannes Schönsperger the younger printed the earliest, surviving, publication in Augsburg, Germany, Furm oder modelbüchlein, in 1524 and was soon followed by others in Italy, France and England. During the first half of the 16th century, Augsburg was the main site for publishing pattern books in Germany. The oldest editions are made as woodcuts. Several editions were printed and older designs were often present when new authors published new pattern books. None of the volumes contains written directions or diagram for executing stitches. This tells us quite much about the reader´s technical skills.
Literature:
lhttps://archive.org/details/MAB.31962000742712Images
German
renaissance patterns for embroidery – A facsimile copy of Nicolas
Bassées new modelbuch of 1568
Prydnadssömmar
under medeltiden – Anne Marie Franzén och Margareta Nockert
German
Modelbücher 1524-1556 Reprint Marion McKnealy
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/437759
Patterns of Fashion 4
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