New: „Schwalm Crowns“

With Schwalm crowns the Schwalm country women “crowned” their splendid Whitework. Usually the name of the owner, and sometimes the year, was also embroidered on the linen.

Crowns are about palm-size, and often the overall shape is that of a half circle containing variants of tree-of-life or triple-shoot designs. They are usually densely ornamented. The many different designs are of extraordinary creativity and show a strong sense of aesthetics. There are crowns with “heavy” as well as filigree elements; some crowns are worked with a single design element only, and others contain all the typical Schwalm crown motifs.

The beautiful crown embroidery can, indeed, be seen in the museums of the Schwalm, but up to now there has been no published collection of design drawings. I believe the enormous treasure bequeathed to us is too valuable to let slide into obscurity. Not only are crowns too interesting and too attractive, but they also have the right to exist today alongside the Schwalm Whitework that is enjoying a resurgence. Thus, if one invests many, many hours stitching the Whitework, is it not right that that work should be “crowned”? At very least, the initials of the embroiderer, as well as the year, are worth noting. Furthermore, it is my opinion that including the approximate time spent embroidering is also important.

Therefore, I have hired a professional designer to reproduce, using today’s technology, line designs of historical crown embroidery. This was not always an easy task. Some crowns, due to age and long use, were in fragments; for others I had only a shadowy outline left on the linen to go by. Nevertheless, in the end my efforts were successful!

Based on these line drawings I have reworked almost all the crowns on handwoven linen. I have photographed the finished crowns and prepared them for publication together with the line drawn designs. I would not deprive you of the historical variations of particularly popular crowns, and so many of the embroidered crowns will have several line drawings. Unfortunately, this vast amount of material would not fit into one book and so this new endeavor has become two books!

The first volume
“Schwalm Crowns”
answers and discusses on 13 pages

  • What are crowns?
  • Which colours do crowns have?
  • Where to place crowns?
  • How to get the design onto the fabric?
  • How to embroider crowns?
  • How to work baskets?
  • How to embroider birds?
  • How to arrange Cross stitch patterns below crowns?
  • What are double crowns
  • Materials
  • Notes

there are 8 pages of charted Cross stitch ornaments and Cross stitch letters and numbers, which were worked in connection with crowns;
and there are 70 pages containing 96 different embroidered crowns – some small, many medium and some corner crowns – in all 184 design variations.

The second volume
“Grand Schwalm Crowns”
presents the most grand, the most beautiful and the most elaborate embroideries – 66 in all – and their 100 design variants.

Schwalm Crowns

Schwalm Crowns

including line drawn designs and the appropriate charted Cross stitch ornaments

Text: English
92 Seiten
Ringbindung
35,00 €

open product

Grand Schwalm Crowns

Grand Schwalm Crowns

including line drawn designs

.

Text: English
83 Seiten
Ringbindung
35,00 €

open product

Preserving, treasuring and creating anew

Complementing Schwalm Whitework embroidery is the unique world of … the CROWNS!

Splendid white embroidered linens for very special occasions were decorated with crowns.

15cm
Here’s a little challenge for you. Take a few motifs such as:

  • hearts
  • tulips or other flower shapes
  • baskets
  • circles
  • leaves
  • stems and
  • tendrils
  • and, using them, try to create a design with a width of at least 15 cm.

    How many different designs – not only nuances – can one make using such a small range of design elements?

    KG-83.1

    I have been astonished to learn of the aesthetic sense and extreme creativity of our forebears when they created such wonderful patterns and designs.
    Yet it was very difficult for outsiders to come by those crown designs.

    Many years ago I began to collect such Schwalm designs. Some of them are nearly two hundred years old.

    Kg1
    KG6a
    16.02.11 043

    Currently, I own the princely number of more than 150 pieces! This treasure I want to share with you.
    I have hired a designer to recreate, using today’s technology, all the beautiful Schwalm designs in my collection.

    I have assigned to myself the task of embroidering all the designs – spending hours, days and even months to complete them.

    Now the result is nearly tangible; stay tuned!
    View it here!