beyondthisdarkhouse:

When I started choosing embroidery patterns for my store, I was really focused on relatively small, simple designs. Things that would be quick and easy for beginners. But honestly… I think I underestimated just how easy the printed interfacing would be, since it’s the needlework version of completing a dot-to-dot patterns. They take time, but none of the constant counting and ripping stitches out.

So that meant I’ve started to get ambitious. Little designs are still great, but what about a few designs that are dazzling from the other side of the room? As a treat?

Photograph of a printed folk embroidery pattern of a vine of climbing roses, which is being peeled up like a sticker before it attaches to fabric.ALT
Photograph of a printed folk embroidery pattern of doves and flowering plants, which is being peeled up like a sticker before it attaches to fabric.ALT

Maybe just one of Giovanni Ostaus’s shirt opening border designs from 1561?

A bold floral finial at the bottom of twin embroidery borders, made to accomodate a shirt opening.ALT

Some fancy chickens and um… tulips? pomegranates? water fountains?

A pattern of stylized folk embroidery chickens, a strip of white material on a rustic wooden spoolALT

And just for me, a pattern you won’t find in any history book, a little confection I made that I like to call: “Strawberry Fieldmice Forever”

A whimsical embroidery pattern of cute little strawberries and repeats of mice chasing after themALT

That’s only like, half of them. I just dumped a whole bunch onto my Etsy.

Interested?

Beginner-friendly historical and fantasy embroidery patterns, right this way!