I am so excited to share her with you all~ I have been working on her all the summer trying her get her just as she has been living in my mind's eye for so long~ her name is "Cybl"....and you can see more of her on eBay here~ Cybl on eBay . I absolutely adore her!
▼
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Queen of the Shadows~
I am so excited to share her with you all~ I have been working on her all the summer trying her get her just as she has been living in my mind's eye for so long~ her name is "Cybl"....and you can see more of her on eBay here~ Cybl on eBay . I absolutely adore her!
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Mid 18th Figured Silk Lustring
Often assumed to be brocade, the above is a wonderful, dainty and most feminine example of a figured lustring. In case you have heard the term but are unfamiliar, here is an excerpt from Silk Designs of the Eighteenth Century by Natalie Rothstein~
'The lustring was produced from the late 17th century to the early 19th century. Some of the most successful English silks were lustrings, they were a favorite export to the American Colonies and many of the designs by both Leman and Garthwaite were intended for them. It was a light crisp silk woven in a fine tabby with a special quality, a high lustre on the silk imparted by the process of lustrating the warp before weaving.The warp was stretched and heated having been coated with beer or something similar. Some accounts suggest that the silk was heated, stretched and glazed further after weaving.'
But what actually makes a figured lustring different from a brocade you ask? The pattern is woven from the weft threads of the ground, there are no threads carried from one motif to the next~ the next photo is a back view~
Figured lustrings such as this were fairly expensive, but very popular with all classes of ladies~ the fancier the designs, the higher the price~ and of coarse, they came in plain (unfigured) and striped as well.
The above is a spotted example, in the same colors as mine, from Barbara Johnson's Album~ she used 18 yards of it for a negligee she wore for her brother's birthday.
So light and crisp, and paper thin.
Here is another example of a 'strip'd and flower'd lustring' in her book a few years later~ no yardage is given on this one, but same type dress, so one can safely assume she would need that great of amount as well.
quite hard to photograph, it still does have a wonderful shiny appearance~ quite unlike the pressed out pattern of a watered silk....and not as shiny as say a glazed chintz, just very lustrous~ hmmm...I guess that's why its called lustring ;)
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Sunday, August 11, 2013
New Halloween Doll on PFATT Marketplace
A New Acorn Sifster for offer~ Sallye Culpeper
Tuesday, August 06, 2013
Autumn 2013 Prims on stands Sept.1st
Hasn't the summer flown by! We just arrived back from an absolutely fabulous trip to Yellowstone National Park~ I have so much to share with you but first I thought I'd let you know my Pumpkin Eaters will be featured in the upcoming Autumn issue of Stampington's Prims Magazine!
Its a fabulous issue~ full of both Halloween fun AND Christmas goodies~ leave it to the fabulous editors at Stampington to flawlessly mesh Halloween Ghoulies & Christmas Merriment all in the same issue! I introduce my special Punkin Eater special edition dollys in my story, 'Beware the Blood Moon' .... and tho it sounds ghoulish, the blood moon, if you are not familiar, is the first full moon after the Harvest Moon.
The new issue will be available at your favorite bookstore the first of September, and if you just cant wait, you can order one directly from Stampington here~
http://stampington.com/publications/whats-new-coming-soon/Prims-Autumn-2013