Friday, September 2, 2011

Sewing Chronicles of Lady Lizbeth, Secret Diary of a Time Travelling Maide: Meet that Rascal Wiliam Sainsbury

Oh William Sainsbury, you rascal you!

It's all Sweet Will's fault that Liz ended up temporarily trapped in Tudor times.

He seemed so cute when she'd first met him back at the local Elizabethan Springe Flinge. And then, when he suggested a meet-up on her trip to London, well.... after all they'd been Facebook friends for over a year. It wasn't like she didn't know anything about him.

Wrong!

Will had plans for Liz, and they didn't just involve a quick kiss at the pub door. You see, Will's got needs - no not THOSE kinds of needs. His involved getting back home, and the pathway home just isn't as easy to follow as you might think. He needed a little help. And Liz was just the kind of help he needed.

So now Liz has got her needle buried in more blackwork embroidery than she ever dreamed about.

And she's blogging the old-fashioned way.


(Co-Published with The Simple Romantic)

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Have Needle Will Time Travel

     Looks like my friend Lizbeth will be lost in Tudor Tymes for some tyme to come.
     Listen in on her time travel adventures, "The Sewing Chronicles of Lady Lizbeth: The Secret Diary of a Time Traveling Maide", via my podcasts from The Simple Romantic Travels Through Time. The Simple Romantic has, currently, recorded three episodes about Liz. Look for them in the June, July and August edition of "Unpolished Performances"

Download these free audio shows directly from the iTunes store with this link (or search the iTunes store using the term 'unpolished performances') 
     You can also listen to this show from your computer by following this link http://web.me.com/simpleromantic/Simple_Romantic/Podcast/Podcast.html
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Show Scoop: Our American blogger, Liz, is looking forward to a summer in London, sewing, sightseeing, practicing Bartok on the piano, and developing some great new historical and modern fashion content for her sewing blog.


It’s always a challenge keeping your online journal going when you’re on a trip, but Liz hadn’t counted on that trip extending back to the England of Queen Elzabeth the First.

Does anybody know if there’s a widget for blogging access that remote?



Monday, June 27, 2011

Those Tudors Keep Me in Stitches



These blog entries come from an iPad that Lizbeth left at my house when she went off to London for the summer. She asked me to post them for her if she ended up doing any traveling in areas where she might have difficulty accessing wifi. I’d say that being trapped in Tudor times, fits that bill.

So while Liz is otherwise engaged I’ll help out by cleaning up her notes and posting whenever I get a chance.

Laurel Shimer

Stop on by my art journal, The Simple Romantic to read and listen in to The Sewing Chronicles of Lady Liz: Secret Diary of a Time Traveling Maide,  the story of Liz's travels back in time to date 
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In the time of England’s Elizabeth I, the merchant class was enjoying new opportunities to travel and make a buck (ok let’s say a pound or a piece of eight) in the export/import business. That’s right, that means that if you were a white male, you might be enjoying new financial opportunities. These men and their families was beginning to rise in society by buying a place in the upper echelons. Sometimes their gold paved the way to marriages that united them with the titled classes. Their upper middle class wives and daughters, who might some day marry a lord, were enjoying some of the new prosperity as well.

It was becoming quite the thing now for women in such households to be educated. The well-red English woman was reading more than her book of Common Prayer and hot-off-the-press Englishe Bible. She was also following artistic movements in Italy, Germany and France. Pattern-books for embroidery were becoming available and new designs emerged from their needles. Naturalistic styalized designs were hot. Flowers, as always, were big. With more freedom of movement, European designs were also influenced by interlaced Islamic arabesque designs.

With pattern books in their hands and money in their pockets, women also created a demand for new styles of embroidery from the professional workshops that provided the sumptuous hangings, that turned their brand new half-timbered houses and stately brick manors into right cozy nests.

Some of their needlework survives. The lovely linen piece above(*) is embroidered in deep pink silk thread, and features an interlaced trellis-work design (think Islamic motif) of carnations and roses worked in outline stitch.

* This gorgeous piece of work is housed at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London



Sunday, June 12, 2011

This Sewer is Lost in Time

The Sewing Chronicles of Lady Lizbeth
Secret Dairy of a Time Traveling Maide

I'm currently lost in time. You can follow my time traveling adventures as they are published in The Simple Romantic, An Art Journal (http://simpleromantic.blogspot.com)

An initial podcast episode, regarding my adventures in Tudor Times, is due out this month. Look for that 'cast as episode 8 of "Unpolished Performances" in the podcast section of the iTunes store.

Lizbeth