Jacobean Embroidery: Its Forms and Fillings, Including Late Tudor

audiobook

Jacobean Embroidery: Its Forms and Fillings, Including Late Tudor

by Ada Wentworth Fitzwilliam, A. F. Morris Hands

EN·~36 minutes·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total

E-text prepared by Stacy Brown, Julie Barkley,

0:08

Jacobean Embroidery - Its Forms and Fillings Including Late Tudor - BY - ADA WENTWORTH FITZWILLIAM - AND - A. F. MORRIS HANDS

0:20

LONDON KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER AND CO. LTD. BROADWAY HOUSE, CARTER LANE, E.C. 1912

0:05

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

1:11

INTRODUCTION

16:14

Op. I

0:27

Op. II - PLATE 2

1:02

Op. III

3:03

Op. IV - PLATE 8

2:01

Op. V

1:24

Description

This volume offers a clear overview of Jacobean crewel embroidery, tracing its development from late Tudor roots through the early seventeenth century. The authors explain how the visible ground fabric and the characteristic interlacing stems, leaves, and stylized birds shaped the distinctive look of the period. By placing the work within broader artistic and trade influences, the text shows why the designs evolved rather than sprang from a single source.

The book is richly illustrated with colour plates that display real historic pieces—from cushion covers at Knole Park to bed hangings from Hardwicke and Powis Castle. Each illustration is annotated, highlighting specific stitches, leaf forms, and filling techniques that students can study and replicate. Together the concise commentary and detailed visuals make it a practical reference for anyone interested in historic needlework or looking to revive these ornate motifs in modern projects.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~36 minutes (35K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2006-08-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the authors

AW

Ada Wentworth Fitzwilliam

Best known for a classic early-20th-century guide to Jacobean needlework, this author helped preserve the patterns, stitches, and visual language of historic English embroidery. Her work still appeals to readers who love textile history as much as hands-on craft.

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AF

A. F. Morris Hands

Best known for a classic early 20th-century book on Jacobean embroidery, this writer helped preserve historic needlework traditions in a way that still appeals to modern makers and textile enthusiasts.

View all books

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