Monday, August 13, 2018

Adventures in Block Printing

This whole thing got started when Mistress Jacquette posted a picture of some shalwar she blockprinted in the SCA Ottoman group on Facebook.

Baroness Sibella had done some block printing previously and had a local friend willing to make some blocks for her at a very reasonable price, so she organized a block printing day at her house.  I already had a smallish Ottoman carnation block that I'd never used and Sibella ordered a block of çintamani dots and a lovely Ottoman tulip block.


My original plan was just to play around with scrap fabric learning the technique, but I decided the night before to cut out a kaftan out of some red linen I had on hand.  I thought about block printing the fabric and then cutting the pieces out, but with my usual layout,  half the gores would have the pattern upside down on them. And that made my OCD-ness twitch despite there being extant garments made that way.

Lafayette and Charlie supervising the kaftan cutting

So Pietro and I drove down to Sibella's and joined Rhonwyn, Angharat, Baronessa Isabetta and Hannah for a day of fun.  Mistress Leda made a surprise appearance to keep us company and work on her current gown (well away from the paint)


Sibella made sure we had plenty of supplies!
photo credit: Pietro

I thought I was going to use my small carnation block with gold paint, but a test on the fabric proved that was a poor choice.  The larger blocks would make the process much faster and the gold against the red looked very faded.  When I was telling another friend, who has experience block printing, about the afternoon, her comment was:  "Red is difficult to print on -you're very brave to use it for your very first attempt."  Brave, not so much.  I just didn't know any better.

Nope.  Gold is not going to work.  Onto Plan B!

Turquoise, however, worked well, especially when lightened a bit with some additional white. Personally, I love turquoise and red together, and it's a very Ottoman combination, so turquoise it was!

Plan B:  Turquoise!
photo credit: Pietro

There were 2 of every stamp Sibella had ordered and Isabetta and Angharat were kind enough to ink blocks while I was stamping, but even still, it took a couple of hours to get all the pieces stamped.

 Stamping a sleeve
photo credit: Pietro

The back panel taking shape

Fabric drying in Sibella's Sunroom

There are a few oopses on the pieces, but all and all pretty good for a first attempt, I'd say. Now I'm hooked and want to do more!

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Drawn-thread apron -gift for Lady Stella

I was involved in the Meridian Largesse Swap this summer, where each of us got a name and some information on that person and their persona and had to make a gift for that person.  (I received an enchanting flag fan with a hand-turned handle) The actual exchange was at RUM but my recipient could not attend.  Luckily, she is in my Barony, so I gave her the gift tonight at our monthly business meeting.

Lady Stella dresses in both late 15th century Italian and Korean.  Since I know very little about Korean culture, I decided to do something for her Italian persona.

Decorative aprons were a big thing in the 16th century, but the earliest I could date one was to 1507.*

Portrait of a Woman (La Muta)
Raphael
c1507
Galleria Nazionale della Marche, Urbino, Italy


Mistress Peryn and the Loggia Vecchio group found me examples of several late 15th century aprons, but they weren't specifically decorative.


Detail from Birth of St John the Baptist
Dominic Ghirlandaio
c1486-1490
Capella Tornabuoni, Santa Maria Novella, Florence

Detail from St Martin Sharing His Cloak Fresco (?) by Dominic Ghirlandaio
last quarter of the 15th century  
San Martino del Vescova
Piazza San Martino, Via Dante Alighieri
Florence, Italy
This photo of San Martino del Vescovo is courtesy of TripAdvisor

The 16th-century aprons often had lace or fancy embroidery, but the 15th-century examples did not appear to include either.  But a plain apron did not seem like much of a gift, either.

I had several examples of drawn work going back as early 1320, but on household linen, not clothing.

The Presentation of the Christ Child in the Temple
Giotto
c. 1320
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston


Detail from The Circumcision
Master of Saint-Severin (German, Cologne School)
c1490
The Louvre, Paris**

The earliest example of drawn work on clothing I could find was 1505

Detail from Bacchus and Ariadne
Tullio Lombardo
c. 1505-10
Kunsthistoriches Museum, Vienna

Ideally, I wanted more robust documentation, but this was for a gift, not an A&S entry so I decided not to stress (too much) and start on construction.

I chose ramie for the material. There were some informal conversations at the Jamestown conference about ramie being closer to the linen one would find in period than any reasonably available linen.  I had some ramie that I had cut into a chiton only to find it was too stiff for my taste.  But a little stiffness for an apron could be a good thing. And bonus -all my white linen was in lengths suitable for camicia, so using the ramie was repurposing a failed project and being more efficient with my fabric resources.

Drawing threads to square the ramie was easier than I expected -definitely easier than pulling threads from fabrics-store linen. Since Stella is significantly thinner than I am, I took some width off each side to make the ties from and ended up with a rectangle roughly 35"x45" wide.

I used hem stitch to hem three sides of the rectangle and then got to the fun part of the project.  I wanted a pretty but not too elaborate design on the apron.  I didn't think it was suitable for the late 15th century and I was also writing 2 classes for RUM so I wanted to be able to finish the apron on time.

I decided on this design

The time invested in carefully planning and marking the threads to be removed paid off and there were no "oops" moments where lines didn't match up (thankfully).  I drew the threads into an X pattern and used a satin stitch on the corners where the thread lines met.


The corners warped out of shape a bit, but I think I've figured out how to keep that from happening next time I have drawn work corners.  I added a diagonal bar of buttonhole stitches in each corner to stabilize them and the triangle shape became much less noticeable, even to my hyper-critical eye.


The last step was to gather the rectangle onto a long narrow piece for the waistband and ties.  I really liked the ramie for an apron, it had a nice body to it.  A light coat of spray starch and a good ironing made it look quite nice indeed.


All in all, it was a pleasant, relatively zen project that was fun to work on that I finished with time to spare before RUM. Better still, Stella seemed quite happy to receive it.  Now I need to make a pretty apron for myself!

I am hoping that Stella will send me a picture of her wearing it.  
Until then, this picture of the apron laid against my gown for contrast will have to do.




*Full disclosure: I did not do a lot of in-depth research, just some searches of paintings
**Despite thinking I had sloid provenance on this example, I cannot find a painting by this name or this artist in the Louvre online collection