The kiss of the sun for pardon
The song of the birds for mirth
One is nearer to God's heart in the garden
Than anywhere else on earth
Dorothy Gurney
1858 - 1952
Hydrangea is out of design and ready to go into test knit.
This one posed some interesting problems and taught me a lot about where to place yarnovers and decreases when designing lace.
I worked from a lace pattern called wide leaf border. The shape of the leaf was right for the hydrangea, but it repeated horizontally,
And I wanted diagonals (I like diagonals; they seem to worm their way into eveeything I design, lol!)
So I fiddled with the pattern, offsetting the repeats until I got what I wanted.
But the leaf faced up. I wanted it to hang down.
Simple. Right? Just flip it upside down...
But it still looked like it was growing up and not down.
The key turned out to be decreases in the center and holes along the edge instead of the center. That pulls the top half of the leaf into a diagonal slant, leaving the bottom half straight up and down.
And by moving the decreases to the center I got a nice clean vertical line up the center of the motif as well.
And then there was the orientation of the trellis and the hydrangea blossoms at the center of each opening.
Again I began with a known pattern, but wound up modifying (as you heard about in yesterdays "black hole" post.
The original pattern called for another lace motif at each intersection of the trellis. But I wanted something more solid.
So I would have someplace to put these:
That my friends, is a little 3-d hydrangea action!
Which will be anchored to the finished piece with a larger bead.
I think...
unless it's too much...
Wouldn't want to be accused of gilding the lily hydrangea...
AND DON'T FORGET; IRIS GOES ON SALE MONDAY!
Are we having fun yet?
5 comments:
Oh very nice. I like how Hydrangea looks. And woo hoo about Iris on Monday!!!! I dunno about you but I'm having fun.
I love the idea of the little hydrangea blossoms gilding the shawl. That should be awesome!
I just got another bead order today and I'm ready to test!
Thanks for sharing the design process, Susan. I like seeing where the designs come from and seeing a little into how your mind works. The colors in the hydrangea match the hydrangeas I have been seeing around almost perfectly.
Susan - have you been nosing around my garden? You seem to have caught the flowers spot on! And it's a Devon garden, in the English West Country (and hydrangeas are my very favourite!).
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