Over the next year, we will be recreating a 17th-century embroidered jacket. The Embroiderers' Story will chronicle its progress.
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Butterflies and Oops!

Butterfly with brown head.One of the interesting things about the original jacket is the mistakes or variances we keep finding on the piece. One of the most intriguing is the butterfly heads. All of the heads on the jacket are done in a golden brown tone using trellis stitch, EXCEPT the ones on the outer left sleeve. These are all done in a bright blue satin stitch. For easily a month I assumed that it was the result of either bad conservation or an addition at a much later date. That was until I looked closely at the photograph of the piece at the Embroiderer’s Guild collection which was worked in the same workshop with the same pattern. Low and behold, the worm heads on that piece were all in bright blue satin stitch!

Blue head butterfly.I imagine that the workshop was full of pieces underway – a few jackets, a coif, some panels, and others. Embroiderers were getting up and working their specialty on different pieces and some guy forgot that the lady who ordered the piece didn’t like the blue heads and had opted for the golden brown ones! Maybe it wasn’t discovered until the jacket was sewn together. Further circumstantial evidence that the workshop was full of similar pieces and embroiderers may have been moving around.

So we are stitching the left arm butterflies with the bright blue satin stitch as seen here!

Tricia

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2 Responses to “Butterflies and Oops!”

  1. Mary Corbet Says:

    Funny! I love little tidbits like this!

  2. Carolyn Hastings Says:

    Like Mary, I love this bit of information. I find this kind of thing all the time in antique lace, and if I had a chance to examine it more closely I’ll bet I could find goofs in the laces that we are using as models for the jacket lace. One reason I love it, of course, is that when a mistake is made in the lace (especially leaving out a spangle), I know that history is being repeated. These people were earning their living, it wasn’t a hobby. If it wasn’t perfect and it wasn’t going to show, they kept going. Now, of course, I go back and carefully sew the pangle in at the appropriate place. But I still feel I’ve touched history, in a way.

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