Threads of Treasure: How to Make, Mend, and Find Meaning through Thread
By (Author) Sara Barnes
Schiffer Publishing Ltd
Schiffer Publishing Ltd
28th April 2024
United States
General
Non Fiction
Memory improvement and thinking techniques
746.44
Hardback
168
Width 203mm, Height 254mm
45g
Learn to make embroidery a way to treasure your life as you create three personal projects supported by the guidance, stories, and advice of 14 modern crafters. Modern society has put a premium on producing, and sometimes that hustle culture (Instagram likes! Etsy sales!) can drain some joy from crafting. This book helps embroidery fans abandon that notion and, instead, realize that life is about treasuring what's important. . Interviews with 14 creative stitchers-from business owners to accomplished artists-make readers feel embraced by community. . Each artist shares photos of their creations, encouraging readers to incorporate empowering concepts into their stitching. . Three step-by-step projects, personalized to the reader's own preferences, teach how to 1. use your threads to treasure and display your life's meaningful special objects. For instance, a special token of a favorite moment like a seashell, an event ticket, or a trinket from childhood. 2. use your threads to treasure your worn and well-loved things, like your favorite garment, with mending and adornment (while also treasuring our environment). 3. use your threads to treasure your small everyday moments-sit still, breathe deeply, and enjoy the making process-by creating a daily practice. AUTHOR: Sara Barnes is an artist and writer who runs the popular blog Brown Paper Bag and was previously an editor at My Modern Met. Her work has been recognized in Embroidery, American Illustration, and other publications. She is the cofounder of Camp Craftaway, a day camp for crafty adults. She lives in Seattle. www.brwnpaperbag.com 350 colour images
Brown Paper Bag blogger Barnes (Embroidered Life) serves up an unusually reflective guide to embroidery thats distinguished by its open-ended projects and thorough profiles of fabric artists . . . Though the profiles and generous photos of the embroiderers impressive work are the main draws, Barnes also includes three projects that eschew step-by-step directions in favor of conceptual guidance on devising original pieces. For instance, one project offers tips for creating thread art based around a found item, encouraging readers to contemplate designs by studying the visual qualities of their item and then sketching out potential compositions before setting needle to fabric. Crafters who feel restricted by the rigid instructions of other how-to manuals will relish this invitation to let their creativity run wild. -- Publishers Weekly
"What a delight . . . part artist interview, part artistic practice . . . A plethora of insight into business ownership and artistic accomplishments . . . Threads of Treasure helps you to sit back and enjoy the process. -- Melissa Galbraith, MCreativeJ
"Inspiring images of needlework, stories from talented makers and unique guidance for ways to personalize my own projects...filled me with creative inspiration and new ideas to take my thread out and revitalize my techniques." -- Laurel C., Textile Society of America member
"Excels in encouraging creatives to reflect on the intersections of art, nature, and daily life. It offers a chance to reflect on the simple beauty of embroidery and its potential to enrich our everyday experiences." -- Megan Adgate, Textile Society of America member
"Delicious. Filled with sumptuous photographs of working textile artists' creations and interviews about not only their process but the journeys that brought them to their work, Barnes provides a profoundly engrossing, wildly inspirational textile creation manual. Putting the book down rather than gobbling the entire thing in one night was an exercise in personal self-control." -- Stephanie M., Textile Society of America member
Sara Barnes is an artist and writer who runs the popular blog Brown Paper Bag and was previously an editor at My Modern Met. She runs Bear&Bean, an embroidery studio stitching pet portraits and other beloved creatures. Her work has been recognized in Embroidery, American Illustration, and other publications. She is also the author of Embroidered Life. When shes not stitching or writing, she enjoys planning things that bring people together. She is the cofounder of Camp Craftaway, a day camp for crafty adults. She lives in Seattle, Washington.