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  2. Mary Card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Card

    The book of crochet patterns in fine thread she self-published was later re-issued by Needlecraft. She prepared a book of jackets and jumpers in coarse thread for the Dexter Yarn Company. [14] She felt restricted in her small apartment in the centre of New York so moved to England in about the mid-1920s and built a home in rural Berkshire.

  3. Lion Brand Yarns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lion_Brand_Yarns

    Free Patterns. Lion Brand offers over 8,000 free knitting, crochet and craft patterns. ... The company came out with organic cotton yarn in 2007. [16]

  4. Frances Lambert (needleworker) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Lambert_(needleworker)

    It is held in a Philadelphia library was the earliest book with knitting patterns. She became the most popular writer on needlework in nineteenth century America. [ 3 ] Her 1844 book on Church Embroidery was said to have had great influence on Agnes Blencowe's Ladies Ecclesiastical Embroidery Society which was formed in 1854.

  5. Needlework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Needlework

    Needlework was an important fact of women's identity during the Victorian age, including embroidery, netting, knitting, crochet, and Berlin wool work. A growing middle class had more leisure time than ever before; printed materials offered homemakers thousands of patterns.

  6. Amigurumi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amigurumi

    Amigurumi graduate in cap and gown Amigurumi llama wearing a dinosaur costume in a field A red amigurumi flower inside a brown amigurumi pot.. Amigurumi (Japanese: 編みぐるみ, lit. "crocheted or knitted stuffed toy") is the Japanese art of knitting or crocheting small, stuffed yarn creatures.

  7. Blonde lace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blonde_lace

    The pattern, which is generally of flowers, is made with a soft silk thread, thicker than the thread used for the ground. [1] [4] This causes a big contrast between the flowers and the ground. [4] It uses the same stitches as Chantilly lace and Lille lace, [4] and is similarly made in strips 5 in (13 cm) wide and invisibly joined.

  8. Antwerp lace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antwerp_lace

    Antwerp lace is a bobbin lace distinguished by stylized flower pot motifs on a six point star ground. It originated in Antwerp, where in the 17th century an estimated 50% of the population of Antwerp was involved in lace making. Antwerp lace is also known, from its familiar repeated motif, as Pot Lace— in Dutch Pottenkant or Potten Kant.

  9. Slip (needlework) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slip_(needlework)

    Illustration of a stool cover with a slip of borage worked in tent stitch on canvas and then applied to a velvet ground, Hardwick Hall, early 17th century. [1]In needlework, a slip is a design representing a cutting or specimen of a plant, usually with flowers or fruit and leaves on a stem.