Washing Your Embroidery
You are often flumoxed when someone asks you a
question like that. You don't know how
to answer it because you don't really know what it is that you do that would
make that difference. I went through all
of the little tricks that I use, recapped on the technique, discussed it with
the other ladies around the table and came up with nothing concrete. But, it bugged me and throughout the morning it
sat behind my left ear niggling. Then,
suddenly, the penny dropped. I asked her
if she washed her embroidery after she had completed her stitching.
She gave me quizzical look and said, "I thought
you weren't allowed to".
A lot has happened over the last three or four
centuries. Our ancestors have invented
electricity, the telephone, the steam train and the internal combustion
engine. As a result we can now communicate
and travel with ease. More recently, our
parents' generation and indeed our own, have put satellites into space,
invented the personal computer, the mobile telephone and Velcro. A survey done in the 1990s found that the
majority of people polled felt that Velcro was the most useful invention of the
20th century.
Interesting.
A few years ago it was the 50th anniversary
of the launch of the first satellite into space and BBC Knowledge aired a
programme on this very subject. It was
captivating, not least because it reminded one of how far the human race has
progressed in our own lifetime.
I grew
up in Central Africa and if we wanted to call someone in South Africa we had to
phone up the telephone exchange to book a trunk call. We would then be told that there was, say, a
6-hour delay. So, 6 hours later we would
hang around the general area of the telephone, waiting for it to ring. Sometimes it did, and sometimes it
didn’t. Very often the 6-hour delay
became 2 or 3 days. Now, thanks to communications’ satellites, I can phone
the United States from my car on the motorway using my mobile phone and I will
be connected immediately. Or, if I want
to save some pennies, I can wait till I get home and ‘Skype’ the person I want
to speak to in the US, I get connected immediately, we talk computer to
computer – and it costs me absolutely nothing.
As a family, we’ve embraced all this new technology
with vigour. We (i.e my husband and I) get
quite excited when we discover that we can do something that we couldn’t do
before. With just the click of a
mouse. Then we say to Dude, ‘isn’t
technoIogy cool’, he rolls his eyes and sighs, at which point we tell him about
party line telephones, life without a microwave, computer, mobile phone, etc.
and writing a letter with no abbreviations, the correct spelling and proper punctuation,
that had to be posted. With a
stamp. At the post office.
By the time we've finished reminiscing he's left the
room, got into his car and is halfway to his girlfriend's house.
Europe in, let’s say, the 18th century did
not have embroidery thread like we have today.
By and large, embroidery was done with wool, what we would today call
crewel wool. These wools were dyed with
natural dyes which were not colour fast and therefore, it was not a good idea
to wash your completed article because the colours were likely run. In addition to that, the manufacture of
textiles was such that our grandmothers could not be certain that the fabric
wouldn't shrink or distort.
So our forebears did not wash their embroidery on
completion. Perfectly sensible, although
the thought of all those royal and ecclesiastical garments being worn regularly
and never washed is rather unpleasant, but we won’t get into that.
It is now 2013.
We have all sorts of wonderful threads, yarns and wools in an array of
exquisite colours. Any colour you want
you can find, and the dyes are colour fast.
If you are using a decent quality product, your colours will not
run. They just won’t. You can soak them
in detergent, wash them with Sunlight soap, and even launder them in benzine.
So, can someone please explain to me how it is that
the (not) washing myth is still out there?
Why, if you want to enter a piece of embroidery to be judged by judges
from either an Embroiderers Guild or the WI, one of the rules is that it may
not be washed? Somebody I know once asked posed this question to one of
these judges. She was told that it was
because stitchers didn't know how to iron their work after they had washed
it. How patronising.
I’m sure that my life is like the lives of most people
in the world today. It moves at quite a
pace. And the embroidery that I do every
evening in front of the telly is my relaxation. It gives me my daily hours of pleasure and
reward. More often than not my best
friend, Neville the Boxer, is lying on the couch next to me and if not, he pops
by for a pat. Which I give him, and
which is why I’m always picking dog hairs off my work.
Although I do wash my hands often like every other
person, I have natural body oils that come off on my thread, particularly if
I’m using white. If I’m working on a
large project it can take me up to two months.
I put it in a plastic bag when I’m not working, but inevitably it picks
up grime. It’s unavoidable in this world
of pollution and domestic workers who think it is an imposition if you suggest
that for a house to be properly clean, it should be dusted. If I didn’t wash my embroidery I might as
well throw it away and, to have to work in such a way that it didn’t get, even
a little grubby, would take all the pleasure out of the pastime.
My opinion, for what it’s worth, is that if something
is bound up by too many rules it puts people off. Where my generation is concerned, many
prospective embroiderers had any future pleasure destroyed in childhood by zealous
domestic science teachers, or nuns who had rulers with which to smack offending
hands.
I don't think that there should be rules that attach
to any creative pursuit but if you think that you need to, at least, know what
the they are then you must not get too bound up, treat them rather as general
guidelines but feel free to break them.
Because, it’s when you break the so-called rules and give your
creativity license to fly that you will produce your best work. The majority of the ‘big names’ out there are
precisely those artists that are breaking the rules. They will not be told what to do, or not do,
by anachronistic organizations that are clinging to the past.
That is fortunate because it is those artists that are
going to keep embroidery alive and kicking.
Our children have grown up in a world that embraces a
whole lot more freedom than we grew up with.
Elitist is a dirty word. They question and debate things,
learnt that whilst they may still respect their parents and those older than
them (but only if they earn that respect), they are allowed to disagree with
them. If we want them to embroider, we
need to make it less elitist and intimidating.
Throw out irrelevant nonsense so that everyone feels they can at least
give it a try.
And this business of not washing your embroidery must
go.
If you think about it logically, with all the dust and
grime picked up along the way - no matter how careful you are - no piece of
embroidery will have a sheen unless it has been washed. In fact, you MUST wash your embroidery. It
brings it to life.
And this is
how I do it:
·
Rinse it well in cold water
to get rid of any lines that I may have drawn with a washout pen.
·
Soak it for a few hours in tepid
water mixed with a teaspoon or two of good detergent.
·
Swish it around a bit before
rinsing it in cold water.
· If I find there are marks -
perhaps chalk paper lines - that haven't washed out, I scrub them gently with
pure soap on an electric toothbrush.
· I then rinse again to make
sure that no soap or detergent remains, squeeze out the excess water, place it flat
on a towel and roll up that towel.
·
I squeeze the towel with
the embroidery inside it to get rid of any remaining excess water.
· Thereafter, I stretch the
damp embroidery in a plastic (not wooden, it will stain the fabric) hoop or
frame that is larger than the embroidered area and place it in front of an open
window, out of direct sunlight, to dry in the breeze.
· If I have stretched it well
in the hoop, I do not need to iron it when it is dry.
· If I do need to iron it, I turn
it wrong side up on a folded towel and press the back with an iron set on medium
heat.
So simple.
I have
extracted some of what I have written above from an article I wrote for a local
stitching magazine a few years ago. That
article was more polite and less outspoken than what appears here. Nevertheless, as a result of what I wrote,
the editor received a flurry of complaints from various Unions and Guilds
threatening to advise their members to cancel their subscriptions to that
magazine.
Oh, the
stranglehold. Which brings me back to
almost where I started. Technology. In the past, if you didn't agree with the
rules put about by those that like to make up rules, you had no option but to
shut up or ship out. Now, however, you
can voice an alternative opinion, get it out there via the internet and in the
process, one hopes, provide some useful advice to those who are looking for
it.
Isn't
technology cool?